My Revolutions
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DUTTON
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My Revolutions
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My Revolutions
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DUTTON
DUTTON
Published by Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.
Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario M4P 2Y3, Canada (a division of
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(South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa
Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
First published in Great Britain in 2007 by Hamish Hamilton
Published by Dutton, a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
Copyright © 2007 by Hari Kunzru
All rights reserved
REGISTERED TRADEMARK—MARCA REGISTRADA
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA;.
Kunzru, Hari, 1969–
My revolutions / by Hari Kunzru.
p. cm.
ISBN: 1-4295-9026-2
1. Identity (Psychology)—Fiction. 2. England—Fiction. 3. Psychological fiction. I. Title.
PR6111.U68M9 2008
823'.92—dc22
2007039459
Set in Dante MT
PUBLISHER’S NOTE
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s
imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments,
events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored
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I used to have -ery intensity,
and a .owing sweetness.
The waters were illusion.
The .ames, made of snow.
Was I dreaming then?
Am I awake now?
Rumi
The question of what would have happened if . . . is
ambiguous, paci-stic, moralistic.
RAF, The Concept of the Urban Guerrilla
to all at
Outside in the garden, workmen from the marquee company are
bolting together an aluminum frame on the lawn. They shout to
each other and make jokes, theatrically throwing bolts and
brackets across the blossom-strewn patch of grass under the tree.
It’s an old tree, taller than the house, and in autumn the fruit
smashes when it falls to the ground. We should, I suppose, have
had it cut down. The men seem happy. Maybe it’s because they
work in an atmosphere of constant preparty excitement. Perhaps
celebration gets inside them. The secret of the good life: putting
up tents.
Other people are out there too. Caterers, a delivery driver; all
preparing for the big do. Miranda has gone out for something or
other, ribbon or .owers or place cards. For once, she said, she
wanted me to be the center of attention. She knew I wouldn’t
approve, but everyone deserved the chance to wish me a happy
-ftieth. Everyone, I thought. Everyone? They’re her friends really,
but I knew how kindly it was meant. And I found myself looking
forward to my party. For a long time, more than half my life if
you want to look at it that way, I’ve avoided large gatherings. It’s
become instinctive, part of my personality. However, during the
last few years I’ve started to lower my guard, a little. Which “karmawise” (as Miranda would say, meaninglessly) seems to have been
a mistake.
I look away from the window. The study has been transmuted
by Miles’s visit. It’s as if, by coming here, he’s put the room in
brackets. The oak desk silted with spreadsheets and reports, the
shelves of books. Even the chipped gray -ling cabinet has taken
on a provisional, insubstantial look. The party preparations going
on outside, which are, I have no doubt, at the very center of
Miranda’s consciousness, feel to me as if they’re taking place on
TV, a scene from one of those early-evening dramas where wellheeled suburbanites experience a little formulaic frisson in their
lives; romance or a murder-mystery.
The workmen are laying out a white awning beside the metal
frame. I sit very still, not wanting to disturb the atmosphere of the
room, the pattern of the life I’ve led in it. Miranda will be back
soon. What will I say to her? What can I say?
Voices in the hall. Not Miranda or Sam, not yet. I open the study
door and meet two young guys, all gum and hair gel, carrying
musical equipment. They ask where it should go and I hear myself
give them directions, modulating through a series of cheery
cadences. Mein Host the birthday boy, his mask still more or less
intact under pressure.
I have to be clear. It’s already over. All this—the house, my family,
this ridiculous party—no longer exists. But accepting that doesn’t
mean I know what to do next, and even if I choose to do nothing,
events will carry on unfolding, and very soon now, days or even
hours, my life here will be over. In the sitting room there’s a photo
of Miranda, which I took on a cold weekend walk at the Norfolk
coast. She’s standing with her back to the camera, looking out to
sea. The light is coming straight at the lens, and she’s little more
than a silhouette: big boots, narrow shoulders wrapped in an ethnic
something-or-other, hair streaming in the wind. Somehow that’s
the image that comes to me: frail, romantic Miranda, rather than
the arranger of breakfast meetings, the recipient of local chamberof-commerce awards, the Miranda of the last few years. Soon a
wave is going to break over her: police, maybe the media. How
will she cope? I wish I could feel optimistic, but Miranda isn’t a
person who deals well with the world’s unpredictability. She’s
always fought hard against randomness, with all the weapons in
the stationer’s: a little arsenal of agendas and diaries and wallplanners dotted with colored stars. Poor Miranda, no amount of
Post-its will ward o, what’s about to happen to you. You’re utterly
unprepared.
The stairs creak as I climb up to the bedroom. I have to duck
my head to go through the door. I’ve never found the low ceilings
and narrow corridors of country cottages quaint, at least not
straightforwardly. They’re scaled to the small stature of poorly
nourished people; an architecture of hardship and deprivation. Of
course I’ve never said this to Miranda. Irregular walls and creaking
.oorboards please her. I think she’d like to forget she was born
into an industrial society. I can’t, at least not in the same way. That
kind of mysti-cation has never seemed right to me. It’s so incoherent, for one thing. A country life, but with plumbing and
telecoms and antibiotics. A rich person’s fantasy.
But this is our house, or rather Miranda’s house, the house she
allowed me to share and always wanted me to love as she did. I
realize I’m standing with my -sts clenched, glaring at the William
Morris wallpaper, the patchwork cushions on the armchair. Above
our bed, hanging from the oak beam, is a dream catcher. I tug at
it, breaking the string. I’ve wanted to do that for so long. Such an
absurd, out-of-place thing. Our house is -lled with these objects—
tribal, spiritual, hand-crafted little knick-knacks that are supposed
to edge us nearer to Miranda’s wish-ful-llment future of agrarian
harmony. There are corn dollies and old glass bottles and prints of
medicinal herbs with quotations from Culpeper printed underneath
in calligraphic lettering. “Only from lucre of money they cheat
you, and tell you it is a kind of tear, or some such like thing, that
drops from Poppies when they weep.” That’s outside the bathroom.
Culpeper is natural, and natural is the .ag Miranda waves at the
world, the banner standing for righteousness and truth.
Why am I doing this, breaking her things? None of it’s her fault.
She’s worked hard to make the life she wanted. She’s tried to be a
good person. And she has loved me. I know what will be the most
terrible thing—the look on her face, the gradual opening of the
abyss. Everything she has known or believed about me, her lover,
her partner for sixteen years, the man who has been a stepfather
to her daughter, is untrue. Or if not untrue—for I’ve tried not to
tell unnecessary lies—then partial, incomplete.
Listen to me. Partial, incomplete. I’m even lying to myself. It could
hardly be worse; she doesn’t even know my real name.
My bowels are loose. I lock myself into the bathroom, among
the lavender bunches and embroidered hand towels and the rows
of Bountessence products in their little recyclable bottles.
Bountessence is the highest expression of Miranda’s romance with
nature. Bountessence is Miranda, though in public it’s the two of
us, because I still cling to some unde-ned administrative role and
occasionally squire the boss to events and dinners in the West Sussex
area. I’m a sort of Denis to her Margaret. Michael Frame and
Miranda Martin of Bountessence Natural Beautycare.
It’s peculiar. Those words make no sense to me. I can’t connect
myself with them, or with the couple they represent. They’re just
sounds. Ever since I became Michael Frame, all those years ago,
I’ve existed in a kind of mental crouch. When I was a child I used
to have night terrors, not quite dreams, more semiconscious imaginings that took on narrative form, like scenes from -lms. In one
recurrent situation I was wedged under the .oorboards, holding
my breath and waiting for the German soldiers to stop searching
the attic where I was hiding. I could hear the clatter of their boots,
a guttural voice barking orders. I used to lie rigid under the covers,
the blood pounding in my head, my entire consciousness occupied
by the e,ort of not making a noise. I think when I went underground those night terrors colonized my waking life. Remaining
undetected has consumed all my energy, has hollowed out my
sense of self. Nothing that has taken place in the meantime has
ever quite felt real.
Except that tomorrow Mike Frame will be -fty, -ve weeks after
me. This life, this Michael Frame life, has been it. This is what I
have had.
I .ush the toilet and wash my hands at the basin, trying not to
look in the mirror. What will happen to Miranda? Will she have
to move away? She’s put so much into this house. If she’s very
lucky they might leave her alone. Maybe it won’t make any di,erence to the world at large, what I did. Maybe it will end with the
two of us. And maybe she’ll -nd a way to feel we did have a
connection. Although there were things she didn’t know, there were
also things she did, which were important and real. I could say that
to her. I could say, Maybe one day you’ll come to understand and find
consolation. But would I believe it? Not really. And would she? I
don’t know. Because I don’t know if it’s true about understanding
and consolation. And I’m not certain we had anything at all.
Miranda will be back soon. She has allowed Sam to drive her to
the shops in her nineteenth-birthday present, a second-hand Fiesta.
An act of faith on Miranda’s part: she’s a nervous passenger and
Sam only passed her test a few weeks ago.
Sam’s room is just as she left it at the start of term; the neat
row of shoes in front of the cupboard, the pile of outgrown soft
toys on the bed. An orderly and rather conventional room. Only
the backpack and the Discman dumped on the bed signal that,
despite the argument we had last week, she’s come down from
university for Mike’s o/cially-becoming-ancient party. I can’t
imagine what this will do to her, the media circus, the betrayal of
trust. There’s a chance she might just shrug it o,. She’s a practical
girl, and startlingly worldly for a nineteen-year-old, at least as I
would have judged a nineteen-year-old of my generation. Certainly
Sam isn’t your idealistic type of law student, interested in righting
injustice or -ghting for the little man. She says she wants to “do
corporate” because that’s where the money is. And, I think, because
she knows it scandalizes her mother and me. Little Sam and her
embarrassing hippie parents; by now “Soma” will be o, her passport too. She hasn’t allowed us to call her that for years.
Fuck. I can’t do it. I can’t face you, Sam. There’s no way.
Working quickly, I open closets and pull out a sports bag, start
stu/ng in socks, underwear, a couple of shirts. I need to move
fast, before they get back from the shops. My passport is in the
study, in a box -le. At least, that’s where I think it is. I check and
-nd it isn’t and for the -rst time since Miles left I lose control.
When you panic you forget to breathe and your heart rate rises. I
know this; I tell it to myself; but things start to speed up and soon
I’m sweeping papers onto the .oor, pulling out drawers and sobbing
with rage and frustration. Outside there’s the sound of a car and
I freeze, but it isn’t them, just one of the marquee riggers. At last
I spot the passport on a bookshelf. Frame. Michael David. British
citizen. 10 April/Avril 48. “British citizen” is the only part that is
true.
Five minutes later I’m in Miranda’s big silver BMW, approaching
the junction with the bypass. I head out of town and along the
coast toward Newhaven, obsessively checking the rearview mirror
to see if I’m being followed. A blue Sierra preoccupies me, then
disappears at a set of tra/c lights. I’m so busy staring at it that I
narrowly avoid rear-ending the car in front as it slows for a turn.
What am I worried about? By now Sam and Miranda will have
gotten back home. Before long they’ll realize I’ve gone. So what’s
left to salvage? At the port I pull into the ferry terminal and park
between cars packed with luggage and -ghting children, all waiting
to be transported across the Channel for the holidays. I only really
admit to myself where I’m heading as I line up for a ticket.
Last year I made this journey with Miranda. She was exhausted.
Over time the business, which once involved -lling little bottles on
the kitchen table, has grown, slowly but steadily, into a substantial
operation. It now consumes all of her energies. Bountessence sells
beauty products—face cream and shampoo and conditioner and
massage oil and so on—through a network of telemarketing agents,
mostly women, some working at home and others in an o/ce
above a tanning salon in the town center. When I met her, Miranda
was making the stu, herself, boiling witchy cauldrons on the stove
at her .at. Now “her ladies,” as she insists on calling them, sell
factory-made “natural botanicals” on commission to customers
whose names appear on a list she rents from a marketing agency
in London. A surprising number of people don’t seem to mind
being phoned by strangers to talk about moisturizer, and lately
Miranda has begun to glimpse a grand and lucrative future.
I insisted on the holiday. I wanted to slow things down. She’d
just secured funding for further expansion and was looking at space
in an industrial park. There was talk of online sales and meetings
with a brand consultant, whatever one of those is. When she
came home from signing the contract with her new investors (a
pair of ambitious local lawyers) I expected her to be elated. Instead
she sat and sipped pennyroyal tea in the garden, -dgety and
withdrawn.
Unlike me, Miranda has a knack for living in the world. Almost
e,ortlessly she seems to -nd herself on the crest of whatever
preoccupation is currently sweeping the lunch table or the Sunday
supplements. I’ve come to think of it as a gift. It isn’t something
she works at; Miranda certainly isn’t a modish person, at least not
consciously. In the last few years everyone around us has become
very excited by money and, sure enough, her talent has led her to
it, like an ant following a pheromone trail. There used to be a
contradiction between money and Miranda, a short circuit. Like
me, she belongs to a generation whose sel-shness was tempered
by a more-than-passing interest in renunciation. We had the notion
that in some variously de-ned way, simplicity was glamorous, hip.
So although she’s now a thrusting entrepreneur of the type celebrated in the glossy magazines she buys with increasing frequency,
Miranda remains con.icted about consumerism. I diagnosed her
silent tea drinking as a symptom of guilt, the unease of a woman
who’d once spoken about alternative lifestyles with the emphasis
on “alternative” rather than “lifestyles.”
Or maybe she was just tired. Either way, I could tell she wasn’t
sure that expansion was what she wanted—and I had my own
private reasons to worry. I was being stretched thin by Miranda’s
ambitions. It was increasingly hard for me to keep a channel open
to something important, something I don’t really have a name for
any longer. An ideal, maybe, though I’m not comfortable with the
word. A vision of the future? Perhaps just to a person, someone I
never was but once hoped to become.
It was clear we both needed space to breathe, so I rented a holiday
apartment in the Languedoc and in my best stern-but-loving tone
ordered my common-law wife (a charmless and apparently legally
null phrase that winds Miranda up whenever I use it) to take ten
days o,. She complained bitterly. Didn’t I understand it was a crucial
moment for the company? I was insane if I thought she could just
pack up and leave, we weren’t kids anymore, and so on and so
forth. I held -rm, tried various arguments, told her she had to
think about her life holistically—meaning, in Miranda-code, that
her work was getting in the way of her relationship with me. That
got her attention, to an extent.
In the end I think she was only persuaded because of the car.
To my horror, the woman who had for the -rst -ve years of our
cohabitation driven a Deux Chevaux with an Atomkraft Nein Danke
sticker on the back bumper had arrived home one evening in a
brand-new silver BMW, which she called a “Beamer” in an a,ected
Cockney accent and justi-ed to me by saying the car gave her
“credibility” and made “a statement” to her suppliers. I’ve always
been grateful to Miranda for pulling me out of a hole and, heaven
knows I’ve reason to be wary about setting myself up in judgment
on anyone, but the car crossed a line. A strong stomach and a streak
of low cunning were required to sell the holiday to her as a chance
to take the thing on a road trip. Depressingly my ploy worked. Her
eyes sparkling with advertising imagery of alloy on scenic country
roads, she agreed.
So we drove through France and for a few days, as I’d hoped,
Bountessence receded from our lives. We were just ourselves again,
two people who had the capability to make each other happy. We
avoided the highways and made our way south on Routes Nationales, Miranda overtaking trucks on long straight roads lined with
cypress trees, me humming along to a tape of Charles Trenet
chansons, wishing I understood more of the words to the one about
being happy and in love on Nationale . We stopped overnight at
a hotel in a forgettable small town where we ate Coquilles SaintJacques and slept in a room papered with an alarming pink rose
pattern, which had migrated like a fungus to cover not just the
walls but the ceiling and the panels of the wardrobe and the bathroom door. We had sex in the soft, lumpy bed, giggling like children
as the iron frame creaked and the headboard banged against the
wall. Our neighbor retaliated by turning on the TV and we fell
asleep to the mu0ed sound of gun-re. In the morning we woke
up and dragged our cases out of the rose room and back into the
car, silent and hung over. I put on the Charles Trenet and Miranda
switched it o, again. Eventually we arrived.
The place I’d booked was described as an ancient stone house
on the outskirts of a tranquil village near Béziers. It turned out to
be a cramped little maisonette, with the rough white textured
plaster, dubious wiring, and mismatched crockery of holiday apartments all over Europe. Miranda went out to buy .owers, and I
opened the shutters and was hit by clean white southern light. We
decided to be happy.
Our idyll lasted four days—days of waking up to the noise of
the village street under our balcony, of chopping tomatoes, speaking
bad French in shops, driving to the river, sopping honey onto fresh
bread and drinking little bottles of beer that accumulated in a green
gang by the side of the loudly humming fridge. We visited markets,
Miranda pointing winsomely at produce she packed into a wicker
basket as I picked through a phrasebook, vainly searching for the
names of -sh and vegetables. I followed her around contentedly,
enjoying the way her thin cotton dress silhouetted her legs.
Miranda liked to take a siesta. She wanted, she said, to live to a
Mediterranean rhythm, at least for a couple of weeks. I’d brought
a fat book with me, a thriller I couldn’t get into, and as she snoozed
in the heat of the afternoon, I lay beside her on the bed with it
balanced on my chest, my eyes skating o, the print as I cycled
through a familiar sequence of thoughts. How circumscribed my
life was, how regulated. How—I hesitated to use the word trapped,
even to myself, but then again I was with Miranda Martin, who’d
been one of those little girls who get to the age of ten with every
detail of their wedding day prearranged in their heads, who retained
the ability to make a plan and then slot the world into it, like a
peg into a board. That was certainly how it had been with us. She
had a vacancy; I was interviewed; I got the job. As usual when my
mind worked in this fashion, I resolved nothing, just ran through
my list of complaints like a man turning the wheel on some rusty
piece of agricultural machinery.
On the fourth afternoon I -nally fell asleep beside her, and
woke up refreshed, comforted. I suggested we spend the afternoon at a village I’d been reading about in the Green Guide.
Sainte-Anne-de-la-Garrigue was an hour’s drive away. It was
a place with a bloody history, the site of a siege during the
Albigensian crusade, after which its Cathar defenders had been
burned at the stake. The Michelin people gave it two stars.
We packed hats and bottled water and turned the air-conditioning
up high to dispel the awful heat in the car. Though it was late
afternoon when we crossed it, the sun was still beating down like
a drummer on the narrow stone bridge over the river. We drove
on through a paper-.at world of white limestone, yellow-green
scrub, and cloudless blue sky as the road picked its way up the side
of a gorge, passing through a pinewood to emerge into gorse and
thistle and a series of hairpin bends whose vertiginous drops were
punctuated on the worst corners by white-painted rocks and
battered metal barriers.
As we passed over the col I caught sight of Sainte-Anne, a spiral
of red-roofed stone houses knotted tightly round a jutting white
rock. When we got closer I saw that on top of the rock was a stark
broken rectangle, the stump of a tower, which the guidebook
informed me was “of uncertain age.” We parked outside a church
in a little square, completely without shade. The village appeared
deserted; the heat had driven everyone inside. The only place that
seemed to be open was a café, the generically named Bar des Sports.
We sat down at a table under an umbrella and drank little roundbellied bottles of Orangina, trying to work up the energy for
sightseeing.
“It’s pretty,” said Miranda, a note of approval in her voice.
“You sound like a teacher giving out marks.”
She frowned. I’d meant it as a joke. Sainte-Anne-de-la-Garrigue
was undeniably pretty. There was a little mairie and a war memorial,
and behind the church a narrow cobbled street that wound upward
in the direction of the tower.
“That was where they executed the heretics after the siege,” I
told her. “Over there. Right in front of the church door.”
“Mike?”
“Yes?”
“Put the guidebook away.”
“But that’s the whole point of this place.”
“What is?”
“What happened here.”
“Why should I care what happened here? Nothing has happened
to me here. It’s just a pretty little village on a very hot day.”
“But—”
“Mike, I want to feel peaceful, not think about people being
burned at the stake.”
So we sat in silence. Miranda took a picture of me and I smiled
distractedly. There was something occulted about Sainte-Anne,
something I wanted to decipher. The mid-afternoon quiet had a
physical quality, an apparent potential for form and weight.
“Do you want to climb up to the tower?” I asked.
“Not yet. Give it ten minutes. Let’s have another drink.”
We ordered mineral water, and I sat and listened to the tiny -zz
in my glass as it mingled with other tiny sounds: insects, a transistor
radio muttering in the back room of the bar. I watched an old man
cross in front of the church, leaning heavily on a walking stick. He
was dressed in some kind of long robe; I wondered if he was the
curé. Then something peculiar happened. I could put it down to
the heat, I suppose. Perhaps I fell asleep for a few seconds, enough
time for the old man to round the corner and a second person to
appear in the same spot. However it happened, I suddenly realized
the person I’d taken for an old man was actually a woman. There
was no robe, no stick, nothing even to suggest them. The transition
was seamless: one minute one -gure, the next another. This
woman was tall, wearing pedal pushers and a sleeveless cotton top
that revealed a pair of wiry, muscular shoulders. Shadowing her
face was a big straw hat. She carried a string bag -lled with fruit:
oranges, peaches, a green-skinned melon. Though she was a long
distance away, I sensed something familiar about her. Maybe it was
her walk, an unhurried but somehow purposeful amble, one brown
arm swinging the bag, the other raised occasionally toward her
hidden face. Smoking a cigarette. Who used to walk that way?
Who used to walk along smoking, swinging a bag?
The woman didn’t look like a villager. A tourist? I thought not;
at least, not a day-tripper. She looked too purposeful. From such
a distance it was impossible to say how old she was. She turned
the corner into the street that led up to the tower.
“Come on,” I said to Miranda. “Drink up. Time for some
exercise.”
She looked at me sulkily. “Right now?”
“Why not? I’m bored. I want to move.” I tried to put something
jaunty into my tone, to disguise the sudden need I had to get up,
to walk after the woman and see her face.
“But I haven’t -nished my drink.”
I grinned a big fake grin. “All right, see you up there.”
“Christ, Mike, can’t you wait two minutes?”
“Of course. Take your time.”
I was gripped by a powerful anxiety. What would I miss if I lost
sight of the woman in the straw hat? I tried to wait patiently for
Miranda, then gave up. Opening my wallet, I tucked a banknote
under the ashtray, scraped my chair back from the table and stood.
Miranda sipped her drink with deliberate slowness. I turned around
and started walking. I was halfway across the square before she
caught up with me.
“You obviously didn’t want your change,” she said sarcastically.
I didn’t reply.
The street that led up to the tower was steep and narrow. As
we reached the church I could just see the woman up ahead, turning
a corner. I walked fast, not looking behind to see if Miranda was
keeping up, passing rows of identical little doorways and shuttered
windows with terra-cotta .owerpots on the sills. I reached the
corner just in time to see the woman stop and -t a key into one
of the doors. As she went inside, she half turned toward me. I
suppressed an impulse to break into a run. She was still too far
away to be sure, but I thought—it was ridiculous what I thought.
Increasing my pace I approached the point where she had disappeared. Sweat was pouring o, my forehead. My shirt was plastered
to my back. When I judged I was outside the right door I stopped,
feeling dizzy and slightly sick. The house looked newer than some
of the others, but patches of its cement facing had peeled away,
giving it a forlorn, down-at-heels aspect. My dizziness worsened. I
couldn’t be certain, could I? I leaned forward, propping my hands
on my knees.
Miranda bustled up, .ushed and annoyed. “What on earth’s got
into you? Are you all right?”
“I don’t feel well.”
“Sit down. Sit on the step. Why did you charge o, like that?”
I .opped down on the doorstep and lowered my head between
my legs.
“You shouldn’t do these things,” Miranda admonished gently.
“You’re no spring chicken. And in this heat—”
“Yes, all right. Don’t go on.”
“Well, excuse me.”
It couldn’t have been her. That’s all I could think. It couldn’t have
been. But there was something about the way she held herself.
Familiar and yet unfamiliar. I thought of my own body, letting me
down after a short climb uphill. How had twenty--ve years changed
the way I walked, the way I swung my arms? Weakly, I allowed
Miranda to help me back down to the car, where she made me drink
gulps of warm plastic-bottled water. Then she drove me home.
After that, nothing was easy. In the evening, Miranda pottered
about in the kitchen and I lay in the darkened bedroom, frozen
into a kind of rigid panic. The next morning I felt physically better,
but I couldn’t reconnect mentally with the way I’d been before we
drove to Sainte-Anne. Could it really have been Anna? We went to
the market and I found myself nervously scanning the crowd.
Two days went by. I was sullen, unable to settle or to enjoy
anything. I’d lose myself in thought and realize Miranda had asked
me a question. Several times I caught her staring at me, her jaw
tight, her eyes narrowed. Our holiday was almost over and the
atmosphere between us was so poisonous that, regardless of what
else happened, I began to wonder whether we’d still be together
when we got home. When we -nally had a proper argument, I felt
weirdly relieved. One minute we were preparing a tense salad in
the kitchen, getting in each other’s way. The next we were standing
in opposite corners of the tiny room, shouting. The content was
irrelevant—I can’t even remember now what sparked it o,; underneath she was telling me I was impossible and sel-sh and cold, and
I was telling her she was controlling and stupid and shallow. I
grabbed the car keys from the table and stamped downstairs. I had
the excuse I needed.
The weather was cooler than before. A light wind blew dust
over the road, hazing the air and moving .ecks of cirrus cloud
across the sky. I took the hairpins on the way up to SainteAnne-de-la-Garrigue at speed, pulling the wheel hard and sending
little showers of white gravel spitting onto the crash barriers.
Roaring into the village I brought the car to a halt in front of the
church. Outside the Bar des Sports a group of old men were playing
cards. As I got out, they stopped their game to glare at the foreigner
whose loud car had disrupted the afternoon’s peace.
As I walked up the steep hill toward the tower, all I knew was
that I needed to see the woman’s face; after that I hoped the rest
would become clear. I’d arrived soon after lunch, earlier than
before. If she had a routine, and if I waited long enough, maybe
I’d see her. I was wearing dark glasses and a .oppy cricket hat
with a wide brim, the kind of hat that identi-es its wearer as
English, beyond any shadow of cultural doubt. It was supposed
to be a disguise. The glasses obscured my eyes and the hat hid
what was left of my hair, which when Anna had last seen me had
been long and wavy.
I realized I’d begun to take seriously the possibility that it was
her. I wasn’t sure whether the chill I felt was fear or excitement.
Outside the cement-faced house, a pair of old women sat on
high-backed chairs. Despite the heat they wore headscarves and
pinafores and thick black stockings. A lean tabby cat rubbed round
their feet, mewing. As I approached they put down their sewing
and inspected me balefully. I said a gru, “Bonjour” and walked past,
trying as I did to peer through the open door into the house. The
thinner of the two, whose jaw worked in a constant nervous
motion, squeezed her neighbor’s wrist and said something. The
neighbor made a dismissive gesture. A little farther up the hill, I
stopped. I was confused. Maybe I had the wrong house. With two
pairs of eyes boring suspiciously into my back, I didn’t want to
loiter around to check. The street showed no other sign of life,
just a long row of closed doors and shuttered windows.
I walked back to the old women and said a second bonjour into
the silence. “La femme—la femme qui habite ici?” I asked, gesturing
at the house.
“Une femme?” asked the thin one, her chin quivering accusingly.
I made “tall” signs with my hand. “Ici.” I pointed to the house.
“L’Anglaise.”
The thin one spoke rapidly to her friend. They both shook their
heads.
“La Suédoise?” suggested the friend.
“Suédoise?” I asked eagerly. “Elle est suédoise?”
They nodded warily, pursing their lips at my insistence. The thin
one pointed to the next-door house.
“Elle habite là?” I asked. They adopted the closed expressions of
respectable women who know there is a limit to the amount
of information one should give a foreigner in the street. Realizing
they weren’t going to reply, I thanked them and walked on.
So I’d been imagining things. The woman was Swedish, some
teacher or accountant or civil servant with a holiday home in the
village, and somehow from out of the depths of my stress I’d
conjured Anna Addison. Relieved but inexplicably disappointed, I
headed on up the hill. The street gave out into a narrow path,
bordered by a mat of dry undergrowth that made me think about
snakes. Feeling like a tourist again, I stood for a few minutes,
catching my breath and looking down over the roofs of SainteAnne. Beyond them the valley dropped away toward the glittering
snail-trail of the river. I toiled on up to the tower, which was
completely featureless, four blank masonry walls with no sign of
an arrow slit, let alone a door. It was hard to see what it might
have been used for. Around its base was a path, which I followed,
trailing a hand against the warm stone. As I completed my circuit
I thought I heard a man’s voice, but when I turned around to look,
no one was there. It was time to go home.
I was completely unprepared to meet her. As I made my way
down she appeared in front of me on the path, very suddenly, as
if she’d risen out of the ground. She was wearing a sleeveless blue
dress and the same straw sun hat as before. It was crammed down
low on her head, the way Anna always wore hats. When we lived
at Lansdowne Road I used to tease her by asking if she was
expecting a high wind. “Pardon,” she said, and stepped around me,
striding on up the hill. Her voice was pitched higher than I remembered. My legs felt weak. I could hear the crunch of her footsteps;
all I’d have to do was call her name.
And what then?
God, her face. Anna’s face. The high cheekbones, the full mouth;
a mouth now nested in lines but the same mouth. There was always
something primitive about Anna’s face. In certain moods she could
-x it into a carved wooden mask, a thing to be worshipped, feared.
Did I even see her eyes? Anna’s eyes were green. When things were
good between us, I couldn’t bear to meet them for too long in case
I gave myself away, blurted out all the promises I was trying so
guiltily to extract from her. But she hadn’t looked up. And I hadn’t
been recognized—her pace didn’t falter as she passed by.
Anna Addison. Who’d been killed in the conference room of
the German embassy in Copenhagen in .
***
Nothing is permanent. Everything is subject to change.
I walked back down the hill past the two old women, who gave
me the evil eye as I went by. Under my feet the cobbles felt distant,
almost spongy, like a street in a dream. Then I began to run, and
once again it was 8 and I was pressed against the trunk of a
tree outside the American embassy in Grosvenor Square.
Annica is the Buddhist term. The cosmic state of .ux.
I was trying to link arms with the guy next to me, whose long
hair was matted with blood. The tree provided some shelter
because the mounted police couldn’t ride under the branches. As
long as I was there, I was relatively safe. All around me there was
an incredible rushing noise, which I knew was composed of
shouting and screaming and -recrackers and stamping hoofs, but
sounded to me like a great wind, like history.
I was twenty years old. I thought about history a lot.
Up close, coming toward you, police horses are bigger than you
could imagine. Facing the metal-shod hoofs, the jangling harnesses,
wild eyes, and .aring nostrils, you know how it must have felt to
be a serf in a medieval battle. The wall of .our-spattered blue
tunics in front of the embassy parted and the horses charged into
us, kicking up clods of turf, their riders standing up in the stirrups
to add force to their baton blows. There was no pretense in that
charge. It was about unleashing as much violence as possible.
People were thrashing about on the ground. I saw a girl trapped
beneath a horse, desperately trying to cover her head with her
hands. The horse reared up, almost unseating its rider, a red-faced
sergeant with a toothbrush moustache. People were shouting at
him, one or two of the braver ones edging forward to try to pull
the girl out. Red-face thought they were attacking him and twisted
around in his saddle, .ailing left and right with his stick. Finally
the horse shied away and the girl was left unconscious on the
ground, a tiny broken thing in a suede jacket with a young man
on his knees beside it, trying to gather it up.
Protesters were running in all directions. Pressed against the tree
trunk I was only a few feet away from the police line, which had
re-formed on the far side of the ironwork fence that marked the
western boundary of the square. From time to time they’d reach
over it and grab someone; we’d cling on from behind, clutching at
ankles or belts in little comic tugs-of-war. To do this we’d have to
emerge from the shelter of the tree. I was hanging on to some
guy’s leg, looking over my shoulder to check that I wasn’t about
to be trampled or coshed, when I spotted her running forward, a
thin girl in blue jeans and a torn army jacket, her long brown hair
tied back from her face with a scarf. There was something both
reckless and self-possessed about her, about her loping run, the
clean overarm action she used to throw the stone; as I watched it
arc through the sky, I felt both aroused and ashamed, aroused by
the casual beauty of her act and ashamed of myself, for so far
that afternoon all I’d done was push and shove and jog around
confusedly, trying not to get arrested. She had the clarity I lacked.
It had become a -ght, so she was -ghting back. The stone fell
somewhere behind the line of black vans drawn up in front of
the embassy steps. When I looked around again, she’d disappeared.
Later, when I met Anna, I told her I’d seen her before, at Grosvenor Square. I told her the way she carried herself had “profoundly
a,ected me”; that was the phrase I used. It sounded pompous even
as it came out of my mouth and I wished I’d found a better one.
We were at the house in Lansdowne Road. I can remember sitting
on the .oor in front of the -replace, leaning against the ratty old
couch. She held her hand in front of her mouth as she laughed. I
laughed too, just from the pleasure of being next to her. I’m no
longer sure why I thought she was lying when she told me it wasn’t
her: she had no reason to lie. She said she’d been on the march,
but a girlfriend had felt faint and she’d taken her home. She’d
never made it to the embassy. The strange thing is that, although
I dropped the subject, I was so certain I’d seen her that it became
part of my personal mythology, an unexamined truth that in later
years took on a dubious aura of pre-guration, con-rming to me
that though they’d felt disordered at the time, even terrifyingly
random, the events of my life with Anna were in some sense
necessary, that the future had been pulling me toward itself, reeling
me in.
***
I don’t remember much about how I got back from SainteAnne-de-la-Garrigue. At the apartment, Miranda greeted me with
a curt nod and a silence that persisted through the remaining days
of our holiday, cloaking our -nal packing and washing-up, the return
of the keys, the long drive to the coast. She didn’t ask where I’d
been and I didn’t tell her; we traveled, as it were, in two separate
capsules, as lonely a journey as I’ve ever taken.
As soon as we got home she threw herself into Bountessence,
driving up to London and returning with loan documents, adagency artwork, sheaves of -nancial projections, bags and boxes
from department stores containing elements of a new “business”
wardrobe of tailored suits and high-heeled shoes. She walked
around the house talking ostentatiously into her phone and whenever I asked how things were going she’d reply with a torrent of
jargon, as if to underscore how far beyond my sphere of competence
she’d moved. I was being warned: I might just -nd myself surplus
to requirements.
Sam’s departure for university gave us a short respite. She’d
spent the early part of the summer waitressing at one of the pizza
joints in the town center, then bought herself a cheap .ight
to—of all places—South Africa, a country I was still unused to
thinking of as a tourist destination. She returned soon after we
did, happy and sunburned, to -ll the house with loud music and
stories about her adventures, which seemed mainly to have
involved her and her schoolfriend Ally climbing up or jumping o,
or into things with the clean-cut boys whose pictures now took
pride of place in the collage of snapshots above her desk. I tried
not to speculate about whether she’d lost her virginity to one of
these variously grinning white teenagers, the one in the striped
rugby shirt, the one with the shark’s-tooth necklace and the
sunglasses pushed up like a headband into his streaky blond hair.
None of my business if she had, of course. As Sam occasionally
reminded me, usually just before slamming her bedroom door, I
wasn’t her real dad. She was the product of Miranda’s monthlong
.ing with a musician, a drummer in an Australian band who’d
gone home at the end of their tour not knowing about her pregnancy. I’d been around since Sam was two years old, and though
I loved her very much I was annoyed to -nd myself so clumsily
possessive. I felt ambushed, tripped up by fatherhood, a ridiculous
and slightly creepy cartoon of a stepdad.
With Miranda so busy—increasingly her trips to London seemed
to involve overnight stays—I was the one who oversaw Sam’s
preparations for university, helped her decide which of her clothes
to take, which textbooks she absolutely had to buy before she got
there. We made piles and lists, and when Miranda was around, the
three of us colluded in putting a happy face on things. Miranda
and I drove Sam to Bristol, carried her bags into the hall of residence and sat through an interminable restaurant lunch watching
her sigh and -dget, visibly wishing we’d vanish and let her get on
with her new life. Afterward we watched her run away from us up
a .ight of concrete stairs; sitting in the car, Miranda leaned her
head on the wheel and burst into tears.
“Now what?” she asked. I knew what she meant. It wasn’t just
that her little girl had grown up. It was us. We were going to have
to face each other.
In old cartoons, the Hanna Barbera shorts I used to watch as a
child, Wile E. Coyote would frequently run o, a cli,. When this
happened, he’d stop moving forward, his legs windmilling in the
air, but it was only when he looked down that gravity started to
work and he fell. Until then he was magically suspended, held aloft
by his conviction that there was still ground beneath his feet. This
was how I dealt with seeing Anna again. By pretending I hadn’t. I
repressed the memory thoroughly and completely, and when it
struggled to the surface I pushed it back down, telling myself that
with my relationship to Miranda crumbling, the last thing I should
have on my mind was the reappearance of someone from my
political days. But it wasn’t just someone. It was Anna. Dead Anna.
In those -rst weeks, the point I kept making to myself, neurotically,
repetitively, was that, though I’d seen her, she hadn’t seen me: if I
could just forget what had happened, the meeting would be an
event without consequences, a mirage.
It meant she’d survived Copenhagen, of course, which seemed
impossible. The news reports had been unequivocal. They’d
published photos, disgusting prurient photos of her corpse, the
arms spread wide, a bloodstained suit jacket hiding her charred
face and torso. Somehow a living Anna made less sense than a dead
one. In her beliefs, her political choices, she belonged to a past
almost geological in its remoteness from the present. Even back
then, death had always been on her horizon; that was what I’d
understood, eventually. You can’t hate the world’s imperfection so
-ercely, so absolutely, without getting drawn toward death. Beyond
a certain point it becomes the only possibility.
So, instead of thinking about Anna, I tried to mend things with
Miranda, ignoring her pointed questions about how I was passing
the days while she was out at work. I kept the house clean and the
fridge full; I tiptoed around her as she worked on her business plan,
and when Bountessence moved into its new premises I attended
the opening drinks party and held a glass of cava and tried to
pretend, as I applauded the speeches, that I didn’t feel as if I were
spinning out of control.
For a while it worked. Our conversations became less strained.
We found things we could do together without getting on each
other’s nerves, watching whole seasons of American drama on
DVD as we ate ice cream on the couch, the very model of the
modern consuming couple. We started sleeping with each other
again. The sex was good, better than it had been for years, but I
cringed from the scratch of her newly manicured nails on my
back, which felt to me like a cat clawing at a door, begging to be
let in.
Then came the evening when Miranda invited her backers and
their wives for dinner. The two lawyers exuded the bland machismo
of small-town worthies everywhere. They talked about skiing and
their wine cellars and how there was money to be made from
the Internet. I’d cooked, which they evidently found amusing; as
I served the food there were barbed comments about housework
and aprons. The women seemed to -nd me exotic and slightly
unsavory. Where had I learned to make Oriental food? Thai, I
corrected. I told them I’d lived in Thailand for a while, during
the seventies.
“Mike was in a monastery,” interjected Miranda, trying to make
me sound interesting. I wished she hadn’t: from the fake smiles
around the table, I could tell I was now seen as a crackpot, some
sort of religious cultist. “I was never a monk,” I clari-ed. “I just
worked there.” I tried to make it sound like a tourist destination,
as innocuous as a spa or a yoga retreat. There was nothing I wanted
less than to discuss Wat Tham Nok with those people. Miranda
herself had only the vaguest idea about the place. It had always
been a sore point that I’d never wanted to go back to Asia with
her. She liked the idea of being shown the “real Thailand,” by
which she meant kite festivals and sticky rice and girls making wai,
rather than back-room shooting galleries in Patpong. And there we
were again, up against yet another barrier to truth, another thing
I’d elided in the authorized version of my life story: the way I’d
actually lost my lost years.
When the cheek kissing and coat -nding and insincere expressions of concern about driving over the limit were -nally dispensed
with, we closed the front door and wandered around in silence,
clearing the table and stacking plates and glasses by the sink.
“I’ll do this, Mike,” o,ered Miranda.
“It’s -ne.”
“Really—”
“Really, it’s -ne. Pass me a cloth.”
She .icked down the bin lid and sighed. “I’m sorry I put you
through that. It’s just—”
“Business. I know. You don’t have to apologize. I understand.”
“I do appreciate it, Mike. You were great.”
“Don’t overdo it. I just cooked a meal.”
“Putting up with them, I mean. I had to have them over. It was
beginning to feel awkward.”
“Why didn’t you invite them before?”
“Well, I knew you—”
“I what?”
“Not you. Them. I knew how they’d be with you, the patronizing way they’d treat you.”
“So you were protecting me.”
She kissed me. “I’m not saying you need protecting. They’re
major investors. I need them to like—to respect me. You were a
saint to put up with them.”
“Ah, I see, it’s about status. So, what do you reckon? Are they
driving home talking about what a great couple we are, or about
why a successful entrepreneur like you is married to some fucking
socks-and-sandals religious freak?”
“Mike, don’t be like this. Caroline and Judith really loved your
food.”
“You think so?”
“Look, I know they aren’t very—cultured. I could have died
when they said Oriental like that. Like it was a pizza .avor.”
“Miranda, as long as it’s about Bountessence, -ne. I understand.
You do what you have to do to make money. See whoever you
need to see. Be however you like with them. Just keep them away
from me. I don’t want to know them and I don’t want to have to
pretend to like them.”
“They’re not so bad, Mike.”
“They’re smug, Philistine, reactionary, self-satis-ed morons.”
“I don’t think that’s fair. They’re conservative. Old-fashioned.”
“Old-fashioned? They’re fucking Neanderthals. You could almost
see those two golf-club Fascists asking themselves if I was queer.”
“I wish you wouldn’t swear.”
“Oh, really?”
“I can see why you’re irritated, but you have to understand. In
their circle they don’t meet a lot of men who—who don’t
work.”
“Now it comes out. Work! Of course. It’s been on your mind
for months. Well, the way I heard it, I work with you. We work
together, isn’t that right? A partnership?”
“Of course it is, Mike. But things are changing. You have to see
that.”
“I think I’m beginning to.”
“Bountessence has to be—it has to be put on a more professional
footing. And you’ve got to admit you don’t have the business background.”
“I don’t want the fucking business background.”
“Exactly. And, besides, I’m not sure it would be appropriate for
either of us. Going forward, I mean.”
“Going forward?” I made sarcastic little quote marks with my
-ngers, which she ignored, doggedly carrying on with her
speech.
“To work together, I mean. Things are strained enough as they
are. I’m not sure I could—what I’m saying is I think you need
something. Something of your own. A project.”
“So what do you reckon I should do, darling? Take up
crocheting?”
“God, you’re impossible! I just meant—well, there’s nothing to
stop you from getting a part-time job, is there?”
I walked out of the room before I said anything I’d really regret.
And once I’d calmed down, two or three days later, I realized she
was right. Anything was better than festering away in the house,
obsessing about Anna Addison. Miranda didn’t want me around
Bountessence and I didn’t want to be there either. There was, as
she put it, nothing to stop me. So I followed the path of educated
mis-ts through the ages and got a job in a bookshop.
Pelham Antiquarian Books is a refuge of slackness in the
economically e/cient high-street hell of our little market town.
Specializing in nothing in particular it has, over the years, turned
into a dusty cavern of yellowing paperbacks, a place where books
go to die. It’s run (slowly, into the ground) by Godfrey Kerr, an
elderly alcoholic who doesn’t seem to give a toss whether he makes
any money or not, as long as no one disturbs him before eleven
or asks if he has anything by Je,rey Archer.
I’d known God slightly for years, reached the stage where he’d
grunt at me and perhaps raise his co,ee cup when I came through
the door. I’d always liked going into Pelham’s, with its moth-eaten
rugs and rickety shelves, its odor of cat piss and intellectual decay.
As the old town-center tradesmen have gone out of business,
butchers and ironmongers and family-run tea rooms edged out by
branches of Starbucks and Pizza Hut, it’s one of the last places
you can pass the time without feeling you’re in some sort of wipeclean playpen for the consuming classes. When I spotted God’s
discreet card in the window, advertising for an assistant, I knew it
would be the perfect bolt-hole.
Soon I was the one drinking co,ee behind the counter and
playing with Stearns, the elderly ginger cat. I went in even when
I wasn’t needed, when God wasn’t too busy drinking himself to
death in his “parlor” to come downstairs and open the shop. I spent
a lot of time rummaging in the cardboard boxes stacked chest-high
in the basement, pulling out buried treasures to read in the brokendown armchair in the back room. I hadn’t the faintest idea why
God thought he needed an assistant. There wasn’t any work to do.
The atmosphere of genteel derangement reminded me of one of
the places I’d worked when I -rst came back from Asia, the shop
where I’d met Miranda. Avalon sold various kinds of new-age junk,
crystal healing kits and dream diaries and cheap silver jewelry. It
was run by a witchy woman called Olla, a refugee from Kristiana,
whose life was plagued by omens and portents; several times a
month she received supernatural word that it was temporarily
dangerous for her to sell scented candles and tarot packs to the
people of the town and disappeared, leaving me in charge. Miranda
was a regular customer, buying books on herbalism, packets of
potpourri, greetings cards. I was suspicious, unused to being back
and still half in hiding as I gingerly built up the paper trail around
Michael Frame. I’d moved to Chichester almost at random, because
of a picture postcard I came across at the monastery, which had
made me feel homesick. So English, that segmented blue-and-green
selection of views. Cathedral Close. The High Street. It turned out to
be a stu,y little town, good to bury myself in. It was only when
I started chatting to Miranda that I realized how lonely I was.
Olla and Avalon disappeared years ago, so long that when I -rst
tried, I found it hard even to remember Olla’s name.
After twenty years without a cigarette I’d started smoking again.
Stress, I suppose, though in part it was an infantile reaction to
Miranda’s new order, which now encompassed a personal trainer
called Lee, who took her running in the park and hung around our
kitchen talking about her body-mass index. No cigarettes in the
shop was one of God’s few rules, so every time I wanted one I had
to go for a walk. I was smoking under the Market Cross, remembering the phone calls from Olla where she’d whisper instructions
into the receiver, telling me to light a sprig of St. John’s Wort and
not answer the door to any red-haired men, when I realized the
well-dressed tourist who’d been walking up and down photographing the cathedral had turned in my direction and was doing
a sort of theatrical double-take. I was wrapped up warmly against
the November weather, in a thick coat with a hat pulled down low
over my head. There was nothing to distinguish me from a hundred
other middle-aged shoppers, which made it all the more disturbing
that this man was now starting to walk toward me, smiling a
familiar quizzical half-smile.
“Chris,” he said, in the tone of a man in the throes of pleasure.
“Chris Carver.”
I felt sick. Ever since France, I’d been waiting for this. I didn’t
know what shape it would take, didn’t know who it would be, but
I knew there would be someone. I should have guessed. It was
always Miles who signaled the changes.
“I’m sorry,” I said. “I think you’ve mistaken me for someone
else.”
“I don’t believe so.”
“My name’s Michael. You’ve made a mistake.”
“Come o, it, Chris. I know we’ve all changed, but not that
much.”
He’d grown into himself, somehow. His hair, which had been
-ne and blond, was shaved close to his narrow skull. His glasses,
which I remember as thick, black-framed things like old-fashioned
TV sets, had slimmed down into tiny steel-rimmed rectangles. He
was wearing an expensive-looking overcoat over a suit in a brash
Rupert Bear check. As he examined me he shot his cu,s, showing
o, the cu0inks, two little enamel portraits of Elvis Presley.
Evidently Miles Bridgeman was still the dedicated follower of
fashion. It seemed unlikely that this man, with his aura of wellheeled cocaine abuse and lunches at West End clubs, just happened
to be wandering around in Chichester at two on a Wednesday
afternoon. Whatever lay behind this encounter, it wasn’t chance.
“Please, Miles,” I said, as gently as I could. “At least call me Mike.
That’s my name now. Mike.”
All things are transitory. All things must pass. Attachments,
whether to material possessions, to people, to places or a name,
are futile. Despite your clinging, these things will fade away.
I -rst met Miles in the cells after Grosvenor Square, the same day
I saw the girl I still believe was Anna. I’d begun that morning, listening
to speeches in Trafalgar Square, as a fairly typical second-year student
at the London School of Economics, which is to say I’d spent the
previous eighteen months in an overheated co,ee-bar argument
about the best way to destroy the class system, combat state oppression and end the War. For us there was only one war. Even though
we weren’t -ghting there (one promise our so-called socialist government hadn’t broken), Vietnam de-ned us. It was Vietnam that drew
us together and made us a movement. I was sometimes a little
vague about who I included in the word “us,” but that Sunday it
seemed clear. There were tens of thousands there, the famous and
the unknown, gathered together in the name of peace and internationalism. We were the People. It was our day.
The speakers harangued us in relays from a platform in front of
the National Gallery, approaching the mike against a backdrop
of .uttering North Vietnamese .ags. Someone let o, a smoke
bomb and an orange haze drifted across the fountains, licking at
the feet of the lions guarding the base of Nelson’s Column. The
smoke was a reminder of why we were there, of the horror being
played out in jungles and rice paddies on the other side of the
world. The speakers linked this to other things: Aden, devaluation.
They told us Britain was on its knees. They told us the system was
tottering.
My name then was Chris Carver. I’d grown up in Ruislip, in the
commuter belt of west London. I’d done well at grammar school,
so well that even my father, a man whose emotions got lost at the
bottom of the North Atlantic on some wartime winter convoy, had
evinced a little pride in my LSE place. In stale sixties Britain, university meant upward mobility. My family were proud members of
what is still termed, with the disgusting precision of English snobbery, the lower middle class. When he heard the news over the
breakfast table, Dad, who owned a shop selling electrical goods,
had cracked a smile behind his copy of the Express, not because he
cared about knowledge or particularly respected those who
possessed the education he lacked. Quite the contrary: he always
made his feelings very clear about eggheads, spewers of hot air. It
wasn’t even about money, not really. He smiled because his son
was on the rise, edging a little closer to the high-walled place
occupied by the governors, the top people. And, of course, because
my ability to pass exams re.ected well on him. “Blood,” he’d said,
gesturing at me complacently with a marmalade-smeared slice of
toast, “will out.”
Standing in the crowd that morning with my -st in the air, there
was one thing I was certain of: I’d had enough of my father’s world,
enough of the idea that life was a scramble to the top over the
heads of those poorer, slower, or weaker than yourself. I hadn’t
spoken to either of my parents since the previous Christmas, when
I’d announced over the lunch table that I was a Communist. My
mother, numbed by pills and her own lack of expectation, had
been incredulous. To her it was simply nonsensical, as if I’d just
told her I was a Negro or a circus clown. Communism was for
Glasgow dockers and bearded Jews. People like us didn’t just turn
that way. But my father understood. He knew I was telling him
to get fucked.
For my dad, disrespect was always a threat, not just to himself
but to the wider world, the nation, whatever it was he thought
he’d fought a war for. Where would I be if he hadn’t known how
to obey an order in ? That was his trump card. His war, my
warlessness. I think he’d have found it easier if I’d told him I was
homosexual; then at least he could have submitted me to the
appropriate authorities—the psychiatrist or the vicar. Something
could have been done.
Even now I hate remembering the gloomy little Oedipal scene
that played out in our front room, the four of us, Mum and Dad,
me and my older brother Brian, wearing paper crowns from cheap
Christmas crackers, the kind that left slight stains of color on your
forehead when you took them o,. I talked into the silence, trying
everything I could think of to get a response, a sign of life. I told
my parents the ruling class were scum, fattened by nine hundred
years of greed and oppression. A cough. The clink of cutlery on
the second-best china. Warmongering bastards, burning the skin o,
little children. Dad segmenting a boiled potato. “Christopher,” he
said eventually, “if this is typical of what they’re teaching you—” I
knew the second part and repeated it along with him—“then I don’t
know why I’m paying my taxes.” My mother asked if I wanted
more gravy. I pushed my chair back and left the house.
So Trafalgar Square was part of a new life, a project of selfinvention. I’d come on the march with my friends, who were all
members of something called the Vietnam Action Group, one of
a dozen di,erent councils and committees that existed at my
university, all dedicated with varying degrees of clarity to the
proposition that ending America’s war in Vietnam was our special
duty. My own anger about the war rendered everything else
disgusting. Every small pleasure was bleached out by the knowledge
that elsewhere such horror existed.
My friends loved to argue. They loved to talk, and though I had
a shelf of Marcuse and Marx and knew the jargon as well as they
did, their talk had begun to seem ine,ectual, masturbatory. In
meetings and teach-ins I was the -rst to stand up and call for
action. I was hopeful—this was how young I was—that I might
just be the one, that it might be given to me, Chris Carver, to
smash up the old world and build something new.
Beside us in the crowd that morning, a boy with a scrap of
bedsheet tied around his head knelt down and doused an American
.ag in lighter .uid. He hunched over, shielding it with his parka
as he tried to light a match. I knelt down beside him and .icked
open my Zippo. The .ag caught and we smiled at each other. He
raised it up on its pole, shook it a few times. Around us, several
people cheered. Comrade Bob, a pol. sci. postgrad and orthodox
CP member who’d only reluctantly deviated from his position
that the march was recklessly adventurist, tugged urgently on my
sleeve. There was movement nearby, angry voices. A little knot
of blue helmets was clearing a path toward us. I wanted to stay
and confront them, but my friends were already moving away.
Reluctantly I went along, craning my neck to get a glimpse of
the boy with the headband. Some kind of scu0e was breaking
out; the charred .ag wobbled wildly on its stick. People booed
and hissed.
As we pushed through the crowd, the others chattered excitedly,
patting me on the back and pu/ng up their chests like real revolutionaries. Alan in his new Carnaby Street .oral shirt, Bob trying
to relight his pipe. An American news reporter thrust a microphone
at Ginger Ken, asking him sarcastically why we were there. Ken
-ngered his glasses and talked at a whirring camera about the Tet
o,ensive and Imperialism and the need to stand together in solidarity
with the people of the third world. The reporter, a small wiry man
with a prominent nose and a .at-topped scrub of sandy hair,
suggested that “all this,” meaning the march, was “just a substitute
for sorting out your problems closer to home.” Ken, blindsided,
couldn’t think of anything to say and the newsman pressed home
his advantage: “Isn’t it easier to criticize America than to do something about injustice here?”
I interrupted, trying to explain that it was all connected, that
the di,erences between the Viet Cong and poor blacks in Mississippi and factory workers in Bradford were arti-cial, but the
reporter had his footage of Ken failing to answer and signaled for
the cameraman to cut. I was outraged: I felt we’d been duped.
Evidently I wasn’t the only one to feel angry. As Flat-top turned
away, rivulets of spit ran down the back of his jacket.
When the march moved o,, we found ourselves near the front,
behind a phalanx of German SDSers who were wearing helmets
and jogging along in formation, much to the amusement of the
ragbag of freaks around them. My friends were snickering too, but
I was impressed by the Germans’ organization, their seriousness.
Most people were treating the march like a bit of fun, a day out:
a guy in a cloak and a cardboard wizard’s hat capered around,
casting spells on LBJ; some street-theater types were carrying a
co/n. But there was an edge to the atmosphere. A group of Scots,
marching under red-and-black anarchist banners, cat called and
shouted insults at the police lining the route. Fucking pigs! Fucking
Fascists! One or two people were wearing helmets, or had covered
their faces with scarves. We made our way down Oxford Street,
watched by Mr. and Mrs. Average: center parting, matching bag
and hat. You could tell one or two of them thought it was VE Day
or something, so we called out to them to join us. Yes, you, sir,
you at the back! We’re having a revolution. Why, right now, of
course. Come and join in!
As the march approached the American embassy it came to a
halt. Word -ltered back that the police were blocking the entrance
to Grosvenor Square. Comrade Bob announced that in his opinion
things were about to turn ugly and he, for one, was not about to
get arrested to further the political careers of the gang of opportunist Trots who’d called this tomfoolery. I told him he could do
what he liked. Of all the VAG people, only Alan came along with
me as I pushed my way forward. “I wish I had a mouth-guard,”
he said. I looked blankly at him. “You know,” he explained, rolling
his shoulders like a rugby forward, “scrum down.” I had the disconcerting sense that Alan, with his horsy face and public-school good
cheer, was just pitching in. Whatever was up, he’d want to be part
of it. It could be going over the top on the Western Front or pushing
corpses into a pit, just as long as there was a team element.
Soon we became part of the crush, staggering from side to side,
pressed forward by the crowd and back by the police. A double
line of helmets was just visible over the heads of the people in
front of us. Behind the cops, press photographers were holding
their cameras up high, trying to get shots of us looking threatening.
Around me some people were laughing; others were angry or
beginning to panic. A thin girl in a plastic raincoat was twisting
around, beating her hands against the back of the man in front of
her. “I can’t breathe,” she sobbed. “I can’t bloody breathe.” Another
girl told her not to worry, showed her how to make some room
with her arms. I was heartened by that. We were helping each
other. We were the People and this was our day.
Something came sailing over my head, exploding in a pu, of
white. A .our bomb. Then another one. I heard whistles and the
sound of screaming, and felt a sudden violent lurch backward. For
the -rst time, I saw truncheons raised over the line of helmets,
coming down once, twice. A chant cascaded forward from the mass
of the crowd. “Hands O, Vietnam! Hands O, Vietnam!” and
quickly we were all shouting, enjoying the power of the words,
punching the air and throwing peace signs at the enemy. Horsemen
had appeared behind the foot soldiers, shying from side to side.
Under the roar of the chant you could hear the percussive sound
of hoofs on the paving stones.
There was a convulsion and I lost sight of Alan. Then I was right
at the front, facing the -rst line of police constables, who were
straining to keep their arms linked. Behind them, one or two of
their superiors were getting nervous, jabbing with their truncheons,
screaming at us to move back. Their jabs became blows, but there
was nowhere for us to go. Order was beginning to break down.
Suddenly a boy was ejected from the friendly cocoon of the crowd,
somehow squeezing through the forest of legs and arms to emerge
behind the police line. He couldn’t have been older than seventeen,
with tousled hair and a big cardigan that looked like his mum had
knitted it. I watched him turn left and right, realizing he was
completely on his own. He tried halfheartedly to run, but he didn’t
stand a chance; a second’s grace and then they were onto him, four
of them pulling him down and carrying him bodily away. To my
left someone else broke through, a guy in a crash helmet who
didn’t even make it to his feet before he was buried under a pile
of uniforms, all trying to get a -st or a boot in. Someone tore his
helmet o,. Underneath he had a beard and a mop of curly black
hair. He writhed around, yelling and kicking. A constable grabbed
a -stful of hair and a sergeant, not bothering to hide it from the
cameras, punched him hard in the face. He went limp and they
dragged him o,.
Frightened, I pushed myself back, only to -nd myself shoved
forward again, barreling into a policeman who tripped, breaking
his hold on the man next to him. Flailing around, I tried to stay
on my feet. All about me police and protesters were grabbing at
one other for balance, like couples performing a violent jig. A great
surge from the belly of the crowd had broken the police line, forcing
the front few rows into the open space of the square. I just about
kept my footing, wheeling around in panic to see if I was about
to get attacked. Around me, others were doing the same thing. For
a moment, disoriented, we hung back; then we were running into
the square, in ones and twos and then all together, the whole ragtag
London mob, students and street hippies and East End mods and
striking builders and Piccadilly junkies spilling like an over.owing
council bin into the big green open space, superciliously surveyed
by the elegant townhouses of Mayfair.
The embassy was—and is—an imposing modernist bunker, with
a short .ight of steps leading up to the main entrance. A line of
Black Marias had been drawn up outside. I sprinted toward it as
fast as I could. Coppers were running here and there, some trying
vainly to push people back, others engaging in weird comical chases
with individuals unlucky enough to have caught their eye. I zigzagged, looking out for horses. My heart was pounding. Were we
about to storm the building? Earlier there had been talk of armed
guards, snipers on the roof, but I was sure we wouldn’t stop. If
somebody got killed, it would be their fault, not ours. This was it,
our Winter Palace. This was . I swerved away from a couple
of policemen, but they weren’t interested in me. One had lost his
hat. The other was covered with .our. They were desperate to get
back to their mates, who were hastily hopping over the ornamental
iron fence in front of the embassy.
Faced with this second police line, our charge ran out of steam.
People were still pouring into the square, but we’d stopped short
at the fence, milling around, shouting and waving banners. The
atmosphere had changed. We’d seen what would happen if we got
caught, so there was both a new apprehensiveness and a new anger
bubbling in the crowd. A constant rain of missiles was .ying over
my head. Not just .our, but marbles, bottles, clods of earth, broken
banners, bits of fence. Someone had let o, a smoke bomb. I could
see a policeman lying on the ground, unconscious. I picked up a
placard so I had something to defend myself with.
Then they charged us with the horses and the scene turned
medieval. As I watched the battle from my spot under the tree, I
realized this was as far as we were going to get. We were a temporary crowd, a mass of disparate people. When threatened, there
was nothing to hold us together; we had neither the guts nor the
organization. And perhaps not the imagination either. How many
of us would know what to do if we got inside the embassy building?
How many would freeze, then run back down the stairs into the
world we knew?
From beneath the tree, I watched the police make little sorties,
hauling people back with them. Everything seemed to be happening
at a distance, on a screen. Suddenly I found myself thrown forward
on to the churned-up grass, my palms squishing into cold wet
mud. Snapping back into close-up, I rolled my shoulders and
windmilled my arms, trying to shake the grip that had tightened
on my jacket, only to -nd a second pair of hands lifting me up
by the waistband of my jeans so my feet lost contact with the
ground. Someone took hold of my legs. Someone else grabbed a
handful of my hair. Lolloping along as fast as they could, the
policemen frogmarched me toward the fence and threw me over.
Before I could pick myself up my arms were twisted behind my
back and someone punched me hard in the stomach. At that point
I started to lash out, from fear as much as anything. A new group
of hands lifted me up, landing a few more workmanlike blows as
I tried to get away. There was little real malice in it; I think by
this time they were too tired to be properly nasty. My face was
mashed against some copper’s blue serge tunic; I could hear his
labored breathing as he helped cart me along, smell his reek of
sweat and cigarette smoke. “Get out of it, you little cunt,” he
muttered. I was thrown face -rst into the back of a van, where I
sprawled on the ridged metal .oor, winded and gasping for breath.
I found myself wondering if the stone-throwing girl had seen my
arrest, had seen me -ghting back, like her.
The van was packed with prisoners, -ve men and a woman,
each handcu,ed to an escort. A middle-aged man in work overalls
nodded warily at me. The others, younger, looked at the .oor
or held their heads in their hands. On the way to the station, the
policemen made small talk. Their eyes gradually settled on
the woman prisoner, whose blouse had lost its buttons and was
sagging open, revealing a section of white breast cupped in a lacy
beige bra. After a while she gave up trying to cover herself and
stared dejectedly at her feet, pretending not to hear the dirty jokes
being made at her expense.
Finally the van stopped and we stepped out into the pandemonium of Bow Street police station. The corridors were full of arguing,
scu0ing people; police and prisoners, lawyers, newspaper reporters.
We joined the crowd, jostling and pushing, the uncontrolled energy
of the demo still surging on through the solid old building. As I
lined up outside the charge-room I spotted someone from the LSE,
a friend who’d been involved in the occupations. He raised his -st
in a salute. I called out and waved. It felt good to see a familiar face,
a reminder that I was there for a reason, part of something larger
than myself.
I waited for almost an hour, as the prisoners in front were taken
down to the cells and what seemed like hundreds of new arrivals
piled in behind. In the charge-room an angry sergeant stood on a
chair and shouted over the din, as another man took down details
in a ledger. “I didn’t do anything,” I told him when it was my turn.
“I was exercising my right to peaceful protest.”
“Put a sock in it,” he said.
A few minutes later I was shown into a cell. The -rst hour of
my captivity was spent uncomfortably, as I tried to delay the
moment when I’d have to use the stinking, lidless toilet in front
of -ve strangers. We sat, three to a bench, staring at one another
in silence. Finally I couldn’t wait any longer and shu0ed over to
the porcelain bowl, where I produced a shameful stench.
Gradually, I began to slide into a state of trancelike despair. In
my back pocket I found a penny piece, which I used to scratch
“Victory to the NLF” in the plaster of the wall behind my head.
The slogan took its place in a palimpsest of names, dates, and
obscene drawings. I felt hungry, but the stink from the toilet was
so strong that when a constable brought in dinner, I couldn’t eat.
I’d been staring at a discolored patch on the ceiling for what seemed
like days when I heard the sound of raised voices in the corridor
and the rattle of keys. A man was pushed into the cell. As soon as
the door slammed behind him, he pressed himself against it,
shouting through the spyhole in a noticeably well-bred voice, “Let
me out of here, you fucking pigs! Let me out! One day we’re going
to raze this fucking place to the ground, you Gestapo fuckers, you
fucking Nazi cunts!” He kept this going for several minutes, pausing
occasionally to cough and spit on the .oor. From the corridor a
bored voice told him to shut up.
After a while the man stopped shouting and slumped down on
the bench beside me, forcing the others to shu0e up to make
room. I leaned back and scrutinized him. He was dressed
unremarkably in jeans and a brown corduroy jacket, but his expensive Chelsea boots caught my eye. I knew what they’d cost because
I’d seen them the previous week in a shop on Newburgh Street.
I’d wanted a pair but didn’t have the money. How clean they were!
My own shoes were scu,ed and spattered with mud. The boots
annoyed me. He annoyed me. “You seem to have come out of it
OK,” I observed sarcastically.
He stared at me, running his hands through his wavy blond hair.
He had an equine face, drilled below the forehead by small eyes
walled o, from the outside world behind thick black glasses. Below
the glasses hung a long nose and a pair of lips, full and .eshy and
rather pink, which drew the gaze involuntarily to the inside of his
mouth. It was as if he was only now registering my presence in
the cell.
“What do you mean by that?” he asked, folding his arms.
“You’re looking very fresh. They obviously didn’t knock you
about too badly.”
“I’m not feeling well, so I couldn’t put up much of a -ght. And,
anyway, I was trying to save my equipment, not that it did much
good. The bastards took it all anyway.”
“Equipment?”
“Camera equipment.”
“Are you a journalist?”
He cocked his head to one side and examined me. “They certainly
gave you a going-over,” he said, showing his teeth in a sort of halfsmile. To my surprise, he reached forward and touched my bruised
cheek with his -ngers. I recoiled. He sat back. Again came that same
half-smile. There was something illicit about it; an under-the-counter
expression, suggestive of brown paper wrappers, specialized tastes.
“Blast my throat,” he said, rubbing his neck with one hand and
sticking the other out for me to shake. Reluctantly, I took it.
“Miles Bridgeman.”
“Chris.”
“Chris what?”
As soon as I told him my surname I felt like checking to see if
my wallet was still there. As I was to discover, Miles always jumped
on things. He was never content until he’d pinned them down, all
the speci-cs, the whys and wherefores. I used to forgive him for
it; in an odd way, his clumsy avidity felt like the most straightforward thing about him, the part closest to honesty.
Years later, under the Market Cross, it was still there. The same
question, the same poorly concealed intensity.
“Mike what?”
“Frame. Michael Frame. As I’m sure you know already.”
Miles sat down beside me, tugging fussily at his trouser legs and
smoothing his coat under his bottom. His movements were sti,.
He seemed to be having trouble turning to his left side. “Bad back,”
he said, answering my unspoken question. “I have to use this bloody
awful chair at the o/ce. Designer must have worked for the fucking
Stasi.” The afternoon shoppers wandered past, averting their eyes
from the Big Issue seller on the corner. I thought uneasily about all
the people who might walk by and see us. Miles told me about his
chiropractor. Miracle worker, reasonable rates. So how had it
turned out for me? I must have looked puzzled. “Life,” he explained,
gesturing at Chichester. “All this. I have to say—it’s not what I’d
have guessed.”
“No, I suppose not.”
“You know, it’s amazing to see you. I always wondered what had
happened to you. I assumed you’d gone abroad—and then—well,
I don’t know what I’d assumed, but I never thought I’d see you
again. Certainly not—well, not in such ordinary circumstances. But
here you are. You haven’t changed, by the way.”
“Bollocks, Miles. All bollocks, from start to -nish.”
“No, I mean it. You look just the same. You’re looking -t.”
“I take vitamin supplements.”
For all his pampered sheen, Miles didn’t look so well himself.
The skin on his face had a coarse, slightly .ushed look. Around
his nose there was a little web of broken capillaries. He shook his
head, as if in wonderment. “There’s so much to say. I barely know
where to begin. How many years is it? I last saw you in—when did
we last see each other?”
He knew perfectly well. The houseboat in Chelsea. The conversation in which I’d told him all the speci-cs, the whys and
wherefores.
I felt like one of those Japanese soldiers they used to -nd holding
out on remote Paci-c islands, still -ghting the Second World War
decades after it had ended. At last, here was Miles Bridgeman,
come to receive my surrender. I felt an overwhelming need to
con-de, to place myself in his hands. Perhaps his appearance meant
my problems were over and no one cared anymore. But that seemed
too optimistic. I’d seen Anna and now Miles; there had to be a
connection. Whatever Miles wanted, my well-being was unlikely
to be a factor in his calculations. Once upon a time, I’d have immediately checked any thought of my own needs with the stern
reminder that there was something greater than the personal—but
that was when I thought I knew what it was. I had enough presence of mind, though, not to make it easy for him just because I
felt sentimental. Just because he’d called me by my real name.
“Why are you here, Miles?”
“Pure chance. It seems almost spooky.”
Unless he was prepared to be honest, I wasn’t going to put up
with any facile chumminess. And I knew he could keep it up, his
.ow of nostalgic bullshit. Miles could always talk.
I remembered, in the cells at Bow Street, how he’d crossed his
legs and begun to speak lucidly and with surprising passion about
his work as a revolutionary -lmmaker, how he took advertising reels
and old information -lms and cut them together with his own footage
of the alienated lives of cleaners and shop workers and the purposeful
lives of political activists and young people moving out of the cities
to create a new existence in the countryside. He wanted to illustrate
the existential poverty of the System. He wanted to propagandize
for internationalism, for a free and progressive style of life. He’d
been to America, and to Sweden. Things were very free in Sweden.
“Cinema is a weapon,” he said, “for changing consciousness.”
I was uncomfortable with the topic of consciousness, which
was a problem, since in those days it came up a lot. It lay in that
gray area between the personal and the political where I found a
lot of things got jumbled up with one another. I’d smoked a little
dope, but that was as far as I’d got with drugs. I’d never meditated.
And as for political consciousness, I tended to rely on a small
storehouse of slogans. All liberation depends on the consciousness of
servitude. That was one of mine. Before Miles arrived in the cell,
I’d been trying to steel myself by thinking politically. I’d told
myself my anxiety over getting arrested was just a symptom of
class privilege: other young men, born in Biafra or Vietnam, didn’t
have the luxury of worrying about their safety, let alone their
career prospects or whatever I thought I might be risking. I felt
threatened by Miles, by his six-guinea shoes and his interestingsounding life. The other prisoners were listening in and I didn’t
want to be exposed as a scared suburban kid. So I went on the
attack. “Oh, yeah?” I sneered. “So how come the police took your
camera? Not much of a weapon, at the end of the day.”
“What, precisely, would be a suitable weapon?”
“Well, what would you rather have in your hand next time they
come to arrest you? A camera or a gun? It’s going to take more
than montage to start the revolution.”
“Interesting. Are you perhaps a member of a group?” He put
an odd sarcastic emphasis on the word.
“I’m cochair of the VAG—the Vietnam Action Group. It’s a
student organization.”
“I see.” He appeared to think for a moment, then asked in a low
voice whether I’d known about the plan to storm the embassy.
I shrugged and told him there had been talk. I told him the
rumor about snipers, that if anyone had tried to get through
the door they’d have been shot.
“We could have done it, you know,” he said. “In my opinion,
we could have taken the place.”
“You think?”
“Well, you didn’t back down, did you?”
“No, I suppose not. But most people did. There didn’t seem to
be the energy to do it. The will.”
“I thought a lot of people wanted to go for it. I’m sure you and
your friends, for example, in the Vietnam—what was it?”
“Action Group. No, not them. They’re not particularly serious.”
“But you are.”
“Of course. It looks like there’s a chance for change and I think
we ought to take it.”
“Ah, yes. Change.”
Everyone in the cell was listening to me now. I felt I had the
upper hand. “No one else is going to do it, if we don’t. No one
else is going to build the revolution. I think we owe it to the
future.”
“But what kind of future will it be?” he asked, leaning across
again and gripping my arm. “What exactly? That’s the question.”
“Free,” I said, suddenly uneasy.
“Yes, I know. But what would it look like?”
“What do you mean?”
“Picture it in your head. What’s di,erent? How does it work?
How do they do things? What do you see?”
I saw myself walking down the street smiling. I saw a sunny day.
Everything I saw looked like an advertisement.
“People,” I lied. “People together.”
Miles looked de.ated. “I think I’ve got TB,” he said, rubbing his
chest. “It’s hard to tell.”
I was angry with myself. Was that really all I could imagine?
Not even to have a picture of freedom. How abject. How bleak.
“So what do you think is in the future?” I asked. “What do you
see?”
Miles considered the question for a moment. “Action. It’s where
everyone’s at now. Either shit or get o, the pot.”
“And what about us?”
He laughed and made a vague expansive gesture with his arms.
I saw he was extremely thin: underneath his jacket his shirt hung
o, his body in folds.
“Oh, I think they’ll let us out one day.”
“Don’t patronize me. That’s not what I meant.”
He stared at me with what appeared to be pity, then stood up
and went to the door, banging it with his -st. “I want to see my
lawyer!” he shouted. “Do you hear, pig? Get me my fucking
lawyer.” Then he turned and said something that at the time
seemed snide and hectoring, but which later I realized I agreed
with.
“It’s not about how you feel, you know. How you feel isn’t the
point.”
The door was opened by the sallow custody sergeant. “You,” he
said to Miles. “Come with me.” Miles brushed his jacket with his
hands. “Catch you at the revolution, I expect.”
Under the Market Cross, Miles bathed me in a warm stream of
nostalgia. So much water under the bridge! Old comrades, painful
memories, oughtn’t we to head for the pub? I knew I had to get
away from him. I couldn’t think straight. “I don’t drink,” I told him,
standing up. “Nice to see you, Miles, but I’ve got to go.”
He looked aghast. “You’re kidding. Twenty--ve years, you can’t
just walk o,. We were friends. I’ve pieced together a lot about what
went on since that day you came to the boat, but you and I never
talked, not really. What happened to you? Where have you been?”
I realized he’d read me all too accurately. He knew part of me
wanted to tell my story. His voice became melli.uous. “You really
should stay and talk.”
“About what?”
Anna, I expected him to say. I needed to hear her name from
someone else’s lips. Anna. Instead he made an o,er. “Why don’t
you come and see me in London?”
“Why?”
“Come on, Chris. Don’t be such a spoilsport.”
“Mike,” I said, walking away, “my name’s Mike.” I turned down
a side street that led in the opposite direction from the bookshop.
Halfway along it I ducked into a narrow lane and waited in a
doorway. When I was certain he hadn’t followed me, I doubled
back toward Pelham’s. The streets and the shoppers felt remote,
as if they were on the other side of a pane of glass.
At the bookshop, I turned the sign on the door to “closed” and
wondered, for the -rst time, about running. I’d done it before. I
imagined packing a case, heading to an airport. There was money
in our joint bank account. How long would it last me in Asia, in
South America? The idea of leaving Sam and Miranda was
unthinkable. I sat frozen in God’s worn leather wing-backed chair,
trying to work out the angles. What did Miles want? What did
it have to do with Anna? I knew that if I was to save myself, I’d
need to face certain things I’d always avoided; I’d need to go over
it all again. There was an unsorted box in the basement I’d looked
into just once, then ignored. I went down to fetch it. Underneath
a layer of old sociology textbooks and blue-spined Pelican paperbacks was a cache of pamphlets and yellowing newspapers that
I tipped out onto one of the frayed Persian rugs. There were
copies of International Times and Frendz and Black Dwarf, .yers
for meetings and demonstrations. In a slew of handbills and
pamphlets, I found what I’d been looking for: traces of myself.
There were several copies of Red Vanguard, a socialist paper that
had, for a few issues, been printed in a workshop below the room
where I slept. They’d run one of our communiqués, an early one,
written before we got tangled up in self-justi-cation. I remember
lying with Anna on the mattresses at Thirteen, drafting it in a
notebook:
CONFRONTATION! CONFRONTATION! CONFRONTATION!
CONFRONTATION dramatizes our condition, which is
struggle.
CONFRONTATION gives a lead to the apathetic.
CONFRONTATION is a revolutionary role model for
disaffected youth.
CONFRONTATION is a bridge from protest to resistance.
CONFRONTATION helps combat so-called mental
illness and disorders of the will.
CONFRONTATION gives you insight.
CONFRONTATION is your path to revolutionary selftransformation.
Action is movement, movement is change and
process. Accelerate the process:
CHOOSE YOUR TARGETS! ACT NOW!
CONFRONTATION! CONFRONTATION! CONFRONTATION!
We worked together, scrawling phrases, calling them out to one
another, little fragments of polemic we delivered like orators,
taking pleasure in the force of the words, their potential to make
change. Often these documents were just a record of arguments,
each line bitterly fought over, picked to pieces and reconstructed.
This one had come easily, I remember, like making up a song.
On the evening of the riot at Grosvenor Square, I was moved to
a cell of my own. Wrapped in a thin, scratchy blanket, I spent the
night dozing -tfully. In the morning I was given a fried-egg roll and
a cup of tea, then transferred to Bow Street magistrates’ court. My
trial, such as it was, lasted under -ve minutes. A dog-faced policeman
described how he’d bravely tackled me as I was running toward the
embassy to throw a missile. I was, he said, looking savage and
shouting words it would embarrass him to repeat before the court.
When he attempted to e,ect an arrest, I had punched him in the
face. I shouted out that he was a liar. The judge, a lantern-jawed
man with a drinker’s swollen nose, sentenced me to six weeks’
imprisonment. I was taken directly to HMP Pentonville.
***
Cold spray spatters against my face as I lean over the side rail of the
ferry. The water, far below, is gray and choppy. Beside me a pair of
girls, Sam’s age or a little younger, are telling each other how sick
they feel, taking drags on a shared cigarette. By now Miranda and
Sam will know there’s something wrong. Miranda will be phoning
the bookshop, trying to get God to pick up. Walking carefully so as
not to slip on the wet metal of the deck, I go inside, where it smells
like all cross-Channel ferries, that queasy cocktail of lager and snack
foods and exhaust fumes and cleaning products that doesn’t quite
mask the acid stink of vomit seeping from the toilets.
On impulse I feed some change into one of the arcade games
in the corridor. Lights .ash and writing races across the screen,
too fast to read. The rules are incomprehensible. Colored blobs
race around. Little dots and spinning things, which look to me like
pieces of fruit, blip in and out of existence, seemingly at random.
I press buttons, push and pull the joystick. It’s impossible to tell
what I’m controlling, which of the little creatures is me. YOU DIE!
says the machine. YOU DIE! TRY AGAIN!
The last time I played a computer game was at Christmas, when
Sam’s not-boyfriend Kenny came over with a PlayStation. I’ve
always liked Kenny. He’s awkward and slightly nerdy, which is why
he’ll never ascend to the position in Sam’s a,ections he so transparently craves. Sam likes sporty boys—uncomplicated squash or
tennis players who can drive her to the pub and talk to her about
jobs or holidays. Kenny has a mop of dyed hair and a collection
of T-shirts bearing the names of Japanese garage bands. Occasionally Sam allows him to escort her to the cinema, but whenever I
ask if they’re “together,” she rolls her eyes and adopts a longsu,ering expression.
When am I going to see you again, Sam? And what will you
think of me when I do? You’ve always lived in a bounded, knowable world: a triumph for Miranda, I suppose, keeping you safe
all these years. I -nd it very hard to think of you as nineteen;
that’s almost the age I was when I went to prison. You seem so
young, young enough for me to wish I wasn’t the one smashing
up your happy home. I can’t ask you not to hate me, or not to
be frightened. I think the best I can hope for is that one day I’ll
be able to sit down with you and explain. You’re too old to be
saying to me, as you did recently, that you weren’t “interested in
politics.” You want to be a lawyer. Well, a lawyer needs to know
something about politics, even a corporate lawyer who just wants
to climb the ladder, to buy the things her friends buy and go to
the places they go. You’re lucky that politics feels optional, something it’s safe to ignore. Most people in the world have it forced
on them. To be fair, I suppose you’re just a child of your time.
Thatcher’s gone, the Berlin wall’s down, and unless you’re in
Bosnia, the most pressing issue of the nineties appears to be
interior design. It’s supposed to be the triumph of capitalism—
the end of history and the glorious beginning of the age of
shopping. But politics is still here, Sam, even in 8. It may be
in abeyance, at least in your world. But it’s lurking round the
edges. It’ll be back. You ought to give Kenny a chance, by the
way. He’s a decent kid.
I realize I’m forming words with my mouth, muttering to Sam
under my breath as I feed the last of my change into the machine.
A voice comes over the ship’s public address system, saying we’re
entering port. We’ve arrived in France. As I line up on the narrow
stairs down to the car deck, I still can’t stop myself. Explanations,
justi-cations, like a crazy old man. Logic says there has to be a
beginning, a -rst moment of refusal. I’m not sure. There’s the
usual Oedipal tangle: Mummy-Daddy-me. There was my brother
and Kavanagh the junk man, the Russians and nuclear war. There
was my need to be better, more decent, to deserve. None of these.
All of them.
My earliest memories are of red bricks and high green hedges,
of being walked past endless garden walls down roads that always
brought us to the shop or the white pebbledash and well-oiled gate
of our house, number-three-avon-close. Depending on how you
looked at it, we were either on the way into or out of London,
part of its great westward sprawl. In the mornings a line of men
walked past the end of our street on their way to the station. In
the evenings they walked back again. On Saturday mornings the
men came into our shop, Parker’s Electrical, to buy fuses and
lightbulbs, staying to turn over the price tags on transistor radios
and what Dad always called “labor-saving devices”: vacuum cleaners
and kettles, gadgets for the wives. I remember feeling slightly
cheated that Dad didn’t go into London to work. I wanted to have
more to do with “town,” where things mattered, where the goods
we sold were made.
I often asked why we didn’t change the name of the shop. Our
name was Carver. Why wasn’t it Carver’s Electrical? Dad told me
it would only cause confusion. Litter, teddy-boys, sons who asked
stupid questions: confusion could take many forms and my father
was enemy to them all. It was, I think, the reason he moved Mum
out of Kennington when he came home from the war. Ruislip was,
above all, an orderly place.
Where we lived was distinctive for only one reason: the air-eld.
During the war, as I learned at school, gallant Polish airmen had
.own out of RAF Northolt to -ght the Germans. Down by Western
Avenue there was a memorial to them, with lists of battles and
di/cult names, all zs and ws. A little farther away was the American
airbase, USAF South Ruislip. When you went past on the 8 bus,
the conductor sometimes called out, “Next stop Texas!” as a joke.
Every day military transport planes .ew directly over our house,
the rumble of their engines cutting through the sound of the Light
Programme as we ate our tea in the kitchen. Like the other Avon
Close children, I sometimes went out to watch them land, taking
turns at peering through a hole in the hedge that masked the air-eld
from the road.
As I watched the planes I would think about war. War was the
midnight raids and lost patrols I read about in Adventure and Wizard.
It was Banzai! and Hande hoch! and being wounded but still crawling
forward to lob your grenade into the machine gun nest. It made
boys like me into men like my teachers and the shopkeepers of
North End Parade, who’d all seen and done wartime things yet
mysteriously chose to mark physics homework or sell pork chops
to my mother. All the fathers carried war around with them every
day, buttoned up tight inside their shirts. War was secret knowledge.
But war had changed since the fathers went to -ght. Now it was
about the planes that made the cutlery rattle on our Formica
kitchen table, planes that .ew so high they couldn’t be seen or
heard from the ground.
I had good ears; Mum always told me so. Perhaps I’d be the -rst
to hear it: a drone, a faint humming in the empty sky, out of which
would tumble the Bomb. I tried to picture everything, which I hoped
might be done by listing all the things there were until they ran
out. I always failed, which made it even scarier. Each time you
thought of anything, anything at all, you discovered it, too, was
part of everything, which was what would blow up if they dropped
the Bomb. I tried out survival techniques in my imagination.
Ducking, crawling under the kitchen table, running down into the
cellar we didn’t have. Even the tube trains went above ground at
Ruislip. Where would we go?
My dad was frustratingly inscrutable on the topic of how we’d
survive the Bomb. Whenever I asked (which was often) he told me
not to worry and went back to the paper. I interpreted this as
courage, but wasn’t reassured. There was something closed about
my dad, and it made me think he knew more than he was saying.
What little I learned about his own war was extracted from my
mum. He’d served on corvettes, escorting convoys across the North
Atlantic. His ship was called HMS Primrose, which sounded disappointing to me, unmartial. He didn’t like to be seen without his
shirt, even at home, because of the smear of livid red scar tissue
that covered his left side, from hip to chest. There was a -re at sea,
was all Mum would say. I could never get her to tell me any more.
I imagined my dad’s skin melting from the e,ects of the Bomb.
Its searing fireball is as hot as the sun’s interior . . . Radiation is particularly dangerous because it cannot be felt or smelled, tasted, heard, or
seen . . .
As I got older, I roamed around on my bike, discovering a world
with no obvious center, an unfocused sprawl of s houses that
gave way in surprising places to open -elds where cows grazed or
football goals stood waiting for Saturday league matches. The
boundaries of this world were main roads. You’d come up hard
against them, screaming with tra/c, intimidating, uncrossable. The
planes took o, and landed. Sometimes I got up at night and opened
kitchen cabinets to see if my mum was stockpiling enough canned
food.
Parker’s Electrical stood at the end of a parade on a long straight
road, next to a butcher, a .orist, a funeral director and a junk shop,
whose window was almost obscured by clutter. The junk shop was
run by an Irishman called Kavanagh, who, for reasons I never
discovered but probably amounted to nothing more than the
standard English stew of race and class prejudice, was roundly
hated by the other shopkeepers. Kavanagh was scru,y. His horse
left droppings on the pavement. He was rumored to deal in stolen
goods or pornographic pictures. When Dad came home from
meetings of the North End Parade Traders Association, Mum
would ask if they’d “come to any conclusions” about him. There
was something sinister in her tone.
My brother, Brian, heard what was said about Kavanagh. Brian
was two years older than me and I did what he said. One night,
under his direction, I sneaked out of the house to the lock-ups
round the back of the parade. Kavanagh’s was at the end and its
wooden door was half rotten, a sad contrast to ours, which was
royal blue and had the words “No Parking in Constant Use” neatly
painted across it in white letters. Brian put his hands on his hips
and used one of Dad’s words. “Disgraceful,” he said. He made me
hold the flashlight while he wrenched out one of the rotten planks
and poured something from a bottle through the hole. I had to
light the matches. It took two or three goes. As we ran away, a
faint orange glow was coming from inside.
I lay awake listening for the -re engines, but they never came.
The next day we went to see what we’d achieved. I was nervous.
If there was a detective, he might be waiting for us to return to
the scene of the crime. The door was charred, but otherwise the
lock-up was intact. There was no sign of a detective, or of
the devastation I was expecting. Brian was disappointed. I pretended
I was too.
A couple of months later, just after my thirteenth birthday,
Kavanagh’s closed down. The man and his junk disappeared, leaving
an empty shopfront, its glass whitened by smeared arcs of windowcleaner’s soap. I had visions, in.uenced by Saturday matinées, of
my father and the other shopkeepers taking Kavanagh “for a ride.”
An unshaven man in a greasy gray jacket, falling to his knees out
in the woods.
Kavanagh’s departure did nothing to appease my father’s anger.
He was always up in arms about something or other—rude
customers, articles in the paper. It was a trait my brother had
inherited. Brian became a very angry man, a shouter in saloonbars, a puncher of walls. There were evenings when we’d sit
round the kitchen table, eating the food Mum had cooked, and
she would try to listen to The Archers while Dad held forth about
Malaya or the West Indians or de Gaulle, banging the table with
the heel of his hand while Brian and I competed to express our
vocal agreement.
Then there was Mum, who had her good days and the other
kind. One weekend I stood in the garden with a spool of copper
wire in my hand. My father, cigarette hanging out of the corner of
his mouth, was up a stepladder by the back fence. I remember him
silhouetted against the sun, a smoky black outline, the wire gleaming
as he looped it over the trellis. Mum ran out of the house, wiping
her hands on her apron and shouting at us in a high, strained voice:
“What are you doing? For the love of God, what are you doing?”
“It’s for my radio, Mum,” I told her. “We’re testing my radio.”
The wire hung slack over the bare branch of the elder tree, running
back down into the spool, into my hands. Crystal sets needed long
aerials. We were going to set it up so I could listen in my bedroom;
it had to go all the way back to the house and through the upstairs
window. My mother snatched the spool from me. Strands of hair
fell across her face, which was red. So were her hands, from the
washing-up. She was red and white, her breath making a little
cloud in the cold as she screamed at me. Another smoking head.
“You’ll electrocute someone! Burn the whole house down! We’d
be trapped! Don’t think you’ll get away with this!” This last
sentence was spat at my father, who climbed down the stepladder,
telling her to shut up and go inside. Grabbing her by the arm, he
pushed her back into the house. It was no use telling her my
crystal set didn’t use electricity, just the energy of the radio waves.
When Mum was in one of her moods, she didn’t listen. She broke
things in the kitchen. She went to bed and cried. Twice that year
(the year I was nine) she phoned the police and told them stories
about Dad. The -rst time, when they got to our house, they
wanted him to go with them. He had to explain for ages before
they went away.
Nothing was ever said in our house about my mum’s “moods.”
As far as I know, she’d never seen a psychiatrist or talked to anyone
else about why she found the world such a hostile place. She didn’t
really have friends, at least not the kind who did more than say
good morning when they saw her at the front gate. The local GP
kept her supplied with pills, a row of little bottles that took up a
whole shelf in the medicine cabinet. On a good day she’d go about
her business with slow deliberation, like someone moving under
water. On a bad one I’d sometimes -nd her stalled completely,
staring straight ahead, a wooden spoon or a tea towel in hand and
an expression of ba0ement on her face. Speak to her and she’d
come to life again, shu0ing round the kitchen as if nothing had
happened.
On a typical Sunday, Mum would be lying in bed, listening for
the rats and cockroaches she suspected were scuttling about in the
attic over her head. Dad would sit downstairs with the newspaper
and I’d be in my bedroom, attempting to summon the outside world.
The -rst time I -tted the pink molded earpiece of the crystal set
into my ear, I heard a tiny crackle, then, very faintly, a voice singing
a few words in a foreign language, accompanied by a violin. Like
all -rst things these sounds were powerful. I felt they were being
born out of the noise just for me, as if I was creating them through
some special skill, coaxing them out of formlessness.
As a hobby, crystal sets occupied me for a year or so. Then, as
a birthday present, my parents bought me a Japanese transistor
radio. It was like hearing the world think. There were stations on
pirate ships out at sea, stations playing advertising jingles and pop
music and sports matches. Stern voices read out news items or
religious texts, spoke terse messages in accents from the other side
of the Iron Curtain. On short wave there were mysterious
phenomena, urgent bursts of Morse code, mechanical voices
reciting meaningless lists of numbers. I heard whispering, women
crying, once a pilot or lost sailor calling, “Come in, please, come
in.” There was something angelic in the surf-sound of white noise
between stations, the whoop and whine of travel across the bands
of the spectrum.
The radio was a way to escape from downstairs, from my deepsea diving mother, wading in lead boots toward the sink. Aged
fourteen, I tuned in to the missile crisis. I call upon Chairman Khrushchev to halt and eliminate this clandestine, reckless, and provocative threat
to world peace and to stable relations between our two nations. I call upon
him further to abandon this course of world domination, and to join in
an historic effort to end the perilous arms race and to transform the history
of man. This was it. The Bomb was coming. Making the most of
what I thought were my last few hours on earth, I stayed up all
night, listening to short-wave artifacts, the noise between stations.
Afterward, noise would be all that was left.
After thirty-eight days the crisis ended, and I was still there, lying
in bed with my radio. The following year the leaders signed a treaty
saying they wouldn’t test nuclear weapons in space or the earth’s
atmosphere or the sea; people acted as if this was some kind of
victory. But what about the missiles? I wanted to scream. They’re
still there, pointing at my house. So when I ran into the couple
outside the tube station, with their painter’s table and their colored
lea.ets weighted down with seaside pebbles, it felt as if I’d found
the only other sane humans on the planet. They were old, in their
mid-twenties. Colin had a scraggly blond beard and a CND badge
pinned to the lapel of his pea coat. Maggie wore a long peasant
skirt at which I stared intently, because each time I glanced up at
her face, I started to blush. She looked like Leslie Caron, an actress
whose picture had recently joined a growing collage on the wall
above my bed. Beat-band singers, models, artists: people from the
Sunday Times color section, from the new world growing a few
miles away in town.
Maggie chatted to an old lady, trying to get her to sign a petition, while I hovered around, reading a lea.et about the
government’s advice to householders on protection against nuclear
attack. We were to survive using whitewash, brown paper, and
dustbin lids. Colin introduced himself, made a joke about what
he’d really do if the air raid warning sounded. I liked him. He
didn’t speak to me as if I was a child. Nor did Maggie. When I
said I wished I could do something, they told me I wasn’t alone.
Millions felt the same. If I really wanted to make a di,erence, I
should come over to their house the next day. There would be a
meeting. “It’ll be very informal,” said Maggie, “but you’ll get a
feel for what’s going on.”
I left with a copy of their newspaper and an armful of lea.ets,
which I promised to put through doors in Avon Close. That
night I read about Distant Early Warning Stations: tropospheric
scanners, enormous parabolic dishes looking out over the Yorkshire moors. Two minutes was all they’d give us. Two minutes
to do what? Make love to Maggie. As I fell asleep I worked it all
out, in the weird, narcissistic fashion of teenage boys. We’d be
on a hill. I had an American accent. Where Colin was in all this
I can’t remember.
I also can’t remember much about that -rst meeting. It must
have been taken up with routine administration. Collecting dues.
Arranging a speaker. I probably spent most of it staring at Maggie,
at the way her mouth moved when she spoke, the shape of her
breasts under her sweater. The other members of Ruislip and
Northwood CND were a spooky bunch. Elderly Quakers, a vegetarian ex--ghter-pilot. It didn’t matter to me. Thursday evenings
now belonged to Maggie and the Bomb, in that order.
Soon I was knocking on doors to tell people about -rst strikes
and secret NATO exercises, fallout and megatonnage, all the
thrilling science--ction pornography of nuclear war. I handed out
pamphlets with titles like Six Reasons Why Britain Must Give Up the
Bomb and H-bomb War: What Would It Be Like? For the -rst time I
had arguments with adults in which I wasn’t always told to be quiet
and respect my elders. Women shut the door in my face and men
told me I was a little fool, but sometimes they argued back, shaking
their heads as I described the deformities of Hiroshima children,
the underground bunkers to which key government personnel
would be removed when the sirens sounded. People invited me
inside, old people who wanted company, a man who put his hand
on my knee and told me I was a likely looking fellow.
The following Easter, a month or two before my sixteenth
birthday, I marched to Trafalgar Square, part of a crowd (much
smaller, I heard, than previous years, but to me still vast) who
felt what I did; who had the imagination to look beyond their
never-had-it-so-good daily lives to the threat that lay just over the
horizon. We waved placards saying No Polaris. We sang “We Shall
Overcome” and “Down By the Riverside.” Mothers wheeled their
children in push-chairs. Bands played trad jazz, because trad was
authentic. Authenticity meant roots and honesty, but according to
Colin it also meant the reality of your death. If you knew—really
held it in your mind—that one day you’d die, then the value of
life would be clear, and you’d live fully, deeply. Most people found
the thought of death unbearable and .ed into the everyday, so most
people were only half alive. Colin felt this was why the majority of
them seemed to be learning to live with the nuclear threat. That
seemed logical to me. If your Being was already infected with
Nothingness, annihilation probably didn’t seem so bad.
Authenticity was just one of the things I learned about from
Maggie and Colin. They lived in a way I’d never even imagined.
Their house, which from the outside looked just like ours, was
open to all, and in contrast to the frozen routine of Avon Close,
had a joyous and unpredictable rhythm. Even if Colin was working
he was happy to open the door and let you make tea in the kitchen,
with its jar of spaghetti on the counter and poster of a Picasso
dove pinned above the stove. Colin was writing plays. I don’t know
how far he ever got, but he’d sit and bang away at an old Remington
typewriter on the dining table, making occasional contributions to
whatever was happening around him, which might include four or
-ve friends singing and playing guitar, or having a loud debate
about Algeria. Maggie would “clear him away” when she wanted
to serve dinner, which she did for however many happened to be
there, pushing his papers to one side and clattering cutlery onto
the typewriter keys to indicate that it was time to lay the table.
Maggie was the magnet that drew people to the house. Though
Colin’s writing was the o/cial center of things, it was her determination and her adventurousness, not the way he’d sometimes
talk excitedly of “having a breakthrough” or sit around dejectedly
when not having one, that gave the place its charged, purposeful
atmosphere. She seemed inexhaustible, working as a teacher to
support Colin’s literary ambitions and coming home every day
to an establishment that at times seemed part boarding house
and part fallout shelter. There would often be someone sleeping
on the sofa, and one or two others on mats on the .oor. Usually
they were other activists, men with rucksacks and pipes, pairs of
tanned young women just returned from camps and congresses
in exotic-sounding places.
Maggie’s frank bossiness, her sudden inspirations, her willingness
to put her shoulder to the wheel whenever there was something
to be done infused the CND group with a sense of direction it
would otherwise entirely have lacked. She listened patiently to my
half-formed opinions, and took me canvassing with her on the
Saturdays when Colin was “trying to get something done” and
needed peace and quiet. We’d get a lift from Squadron Leader
Myers, who had a car, and set up the table in our regular spot
outside the station. We’d eat a packed lunch, and if I was lucky
she would chat about herself. She told me she dreamed about
“doing something really useful” with her teaching. Volunteering,
going abroad. I began to understand, dimly, that she wasn’t happy;
the thought both shocked and thrilled me.
At -rst I tried to keep Colin and Maggie a secret from my family.
One Sunday Brian, always looking to stir up trouble, told Dad I
was “hanging around with some beatniks” and there was a terrible
row. My father threatened all the customary things. I stormed
upstairs, leaving him shouting in the living room while my mum
mumbled and wrung her hands. Slamming my bedroom door, I
found Brian standing on my desk, holding the old suitcase in which
I kept all my CND stu,, the cuttings and souvenirs and supplies
of lea.ets for canvassing. He’d dragged it from its hiding place
under my bed and emptied the contents out of the window. Pieces
of paper were turning end over end all down Avon Close, caught
in hedges, silting up the gutters in little piles.
My professed nonviolence didn’t hold me up for a second. By
that time I was as tall as Brian, though more lightly built, and he
had an older brother’s complacency. My attack took him by
surprise, and I soon had him wedged in the corner by the bedside
table, his lip bleeding, covering his face to ward o, my .ailing -sts.
My dad pulled me away, pinning my arms to my sides until I
stopped struggling.
The incident was judged to be my fault. Mum took to her bed
and Dad forbade me to see Colin and Maggie again. My CND
membership card, which I’d retrieved from the garden, was torn
up in front of my eyes. Shaken and furtive, Brian avoided any
obvious triumphalism. I caught him smiling slyly to himself
when he thought no one could see. That day was the end of
something in our family. I couldn’t give it a name, but after that
it had gone.
***
Leaving Dieppe, I’m exhorted by signs to remember to drive on
the right-hand side of the road. I crawl along in a train of British
cars, past industrial estates and big-box hypermarkets advertising
cheap deals on alcohol. Gradually the country opens up into farmland, interspersed with gloomy towns overseen by brick church
towers and war memorials.
I support Kenny’s cause with Sam for the simplest of reasons—
he reminds me of myself. He’s a painfully serious boy, just as I was
in my teens. One afternoon, about six months ago, he was
mooching about the house after my stepdaughter, vainly trying to
interest her in a vinyl record he was carrying. “Listen to the lyrics,”
I overheard him say. “And the guitar on track three.” She was
sending a text message on her phone. It was like watching a depressive footman hovering behind the queen.
Later that day, I tried to talk to Sam, to tell her that if she didn’t
like him, she ought to put him out of his misery. “You’re being
cruel,” I said.
“He’s here of his own free will,” she replied primly. “Anyway,
what do you know about relationships? You’ve only ever been with
Mum.”
She said it with such certainty. Suddenly I could see very clearly
the unbroken borders of her world, the world of a child. She’d
always treated me as a kind of country bumpkin when it came
to feminine topics; amused, I’d accepted it as part of my fatherly
identity. But her lack of imagination now struck me as odd,
limited.
“Why do you think that?”
It was stupid of me. She looked up sharply. “You’ve never
talked about anyone else. And you were a monk before, so I just
thought . . .” She trailed o,. I was in too deep, and retreated to
wash up. She followed me into the kitchen. “You and Mum.”
“Yes?”
“You’re all right, aren’t you?”
I hugged her. “Of course we are.”
So I never solved the problem of Kenny, and he’s still hanging
around, yearning for Sam just as hopelessly as I yearned for Maggie.
After my -ght with Brian and the ban on seeing her, I stayed away
for three days, then went round to see her on my way home from
school. As usual Colin was typing, Maggie sitting opposite him
marking books. In melodramatic terms, I described what had
happened, hoping they’d be able to help. Maggie gave my shoulder
a squeeze and told me it was good to stand up for what I believed
in, but I shouldn’t have lashed out at my brother. Dr. King had
withstood much greater provocation. Colin frowned and asked
whether my dad knew their address. They fed me bean soup and
sent me home, Maggie’s good-bye kiss burning on my cheek.
After a few months things were much as they’d been before. I’d
avoid confrontations, lying about after-school activities, even
inventing a -ctitious youth club at which I played ping-pong once
a week. If I ate at Maggie and Colin’s I’d force myself to swallow
another dinner at home. Dad knew I was still seeing the beatniks,
but had more pressing things to worry about. Brian had abruptly
left school and started work in the sales department of an engineering company. He was spending most of his salary in the pub
and came home drunk several nights a week, tripping over the
furniture and leaving marks on the wall as he staggered upstairs.
His confrontations with Dad were much worse than my own, and
he had no patience with my mother, jeering at her as a mad cow,
a mental case. In response, Mum grew ever more anxious. Soon
after my seventeenth birthday she was committed.
I’m ashamed to say I only went to visit her once in the three
months she was in St. Bernard’s. It was a large Victorian institution,
a cluster of imposing Gothic buildings surrounded by a high perimeter wall. Inside, orderlies pushed trolleys and escorted patients
down long, echoing corridors. She was on a ward named after
some royal personage, which smelled of urine and boiled cabbage.
The beds were like little iron islands on the scu,ed linoleum.
Brian had refused to come, saying he had better things to do
with his weekend than go to a nuthouse. A nurse took Dad and
me past a row of women sitting in vinyl-covered armchairs or lying
in their beds. Mum had been given a course of ECT. She seemed
not to know who we were. Trussed up in an unfamiliar .annel
dressing gown she smiled uncertainly as my father tried to summon
some gentleness into his voice. “How are you bearing up,
Angela?”
She pointed out of the window. “You can see the birds,” she
said.
Dad nodded encouragingly, then looked at his feet, unsure
how to go on. There was a terrible silence. My eyes kept straying
back to Mum’s hair, which was messy, tangled up in knots at
the back of her head. This was what I found most upsetting. She
was particular about her hair. She’d spend hours at her dressing
table, pinning it up, freezing it into gâteaulike shapes with cans
of lacquer.
Under Maggie and Colin’s in.uence I was reading books and
working hard for my A levels. With my new con-dence I’d acquired
a new group of friends, boys my own age, with whom I listened
to folk and modern jazz records, smoking cigarettes out of bedroom
windows and talking about our various plans of escape from
Ruislip. I’d applied to the London School of Economics: if I got
in, I’d be able to go and live in hall.
As my exams came up, things at home got worse. Dad brought
Mum home in a new hat with matching handbag, talking loudly
and laughing a shiny, high-pitched laugh. Her brightness had something brittle about it, as if she were only performing her newly
learned happiness, acting it out for our bene-t. She had new pills
too, which kept her awake. I’d hear noises in the kitchen at
unearthly hours, three or four in the morning, and go down to
-nd her rummaging in the cutlery drawer or polishing glasses.
Hello, dear, would you like some breakfast? For all her energy, she didn’t
seem able to cook anymore, something about the complexity of
it, the timing. There were small disasters, charred joints of meat,
eggs at the bottom of pans brimful of cold water. Soon we were
subsisting on a scavenger’s diet of canned food and -sh and chips.
Brian and Dad diverted themselves from their panic with breakages
and shouting.
I spent as much time as possible out of the house, working in
the public library or wandering around the West End, a habit I’d
gradually developed since I -rst started taking the train into town
for CND events. In drafty church halls I attended screenings of
Bicycle Thieves and The World of Apu, accompanied by Czech
cartoons in which people built walls and then all the .owers in the
garden died. Soon I progressed to less elevated pursuits. Soho
fascinated me, with its secret alleys and women sitting at upstairs
windows, smoking and looking down at the street. There were
co,ee bars with rows of scooters parked outside. The ampli-ed
clatter of beat bands punched its way out of cellars. I didn’t dare
go into these places. Sometimes I bought a frothy co,ee in one
of the quieter ca,s and sat in a corner watching girls, hoping to
be noticed.
I’d begun to despair of CND. There was something antique
about it, something hopelessly polite. The year the Mods and
Rockers fought on Margate beach, CND youth groups were up on
the pier, o,ering donkey rides and a “non-violent Punch and Judy
show.” “Don’t shout slogans as you march,” advised one of our
lea.ets. “This sounds ugly. Join in the singing, which sounds good
and helps marchers along the road.” The warlords were trying to
kill us but we had to be cheerful and take our litter home: good
little citizens, asking nicely not to be irradiated. On the day I went
on my -rst Easter march, the Committee of held a sit-down
demo at USAF Ruislip, just up the road from my house. I only
heard about it afterward. Hundreds of people were arrested. While
I was strolling around the West End singing “If I Had A Hammer,”
people had been blocking the airbase gates.
Colin and Maggie disapproved of breaking the law. They said
we had to show we were a responsible, rational part of society.
If we were perceived as wreckers or undesirables, how could we
hope to have an e,ect? We’d begun spending time at a folk club,
held above a pub in Shepherd’s Bush. Maggie and I would watch
as Colin, who’d been taking guitar lessons, went up to take his
turn with the other amateurs before the professional singers did
their sets. Sitting next to Maggie in the smoky darkness, I absorbed
her high-mindedness and her optimism. I thought things were
going to change; I was young enough to think the very strength
of my desire for change would be enough.
Then came the election. The prime minister we derided as
Homeosaurus (“Too much armor, too little brain, now he’s extinct”)
was booted out and a Labour government came in. At meeting
after meeting, speakers had assured me that once Labour were in
power, they’d disarm. I believed them: the Labour Party stood for
international brotherhood and peace. I was too young to vote, but
I thought a Labour victory meant I was living in a country that
made sense, a rational country where people knew that one day
they’d die and until that day wanted to live, as fully as they could.
Instead, the new prime minister, Mr. Wilson, made speeches about
economic progress, the white heat of technology. We would be
keeping our nuclear weapons and getting more. After all my e,orts,
all the lost Saturday afternoons and the boring meetings, “we” had
won and still nothing was going to change.
I lost faith in CND and Maggie with it, as if somehow Wilson
was her fault. With the discovery of her feet of clay, my idol became
incapable of absorbing any more adoration. I had no vocabulary
for what I was feeling, and such a hopelessly low self-image that
had she ever shown any signs of reciprocating, I wouldn’t have
dared touch her, but all the same I knew my chaste knight-errancy—
one part Tennyson to two parts song lyrics—was no longer
sustaining me.
One day I was in the West End, listlessly handing out CND
lea.ets outside a theater in Drury Lane, when a pair of Danish
students stopped to ask directions. Freja and So-e were both pretty,
one dark and one fair, over to see the galleries and tick o, sites of
historical interest in their guidebook. I soon realized they didn’t
want to hear about the amount of strontium- in the bones of
children under one year of age and began to brag about how well
I knew Soho. This was only partly true. I’d never actually been
through the doors of the fashionable places I was boasting about.
Luckily the girls had as little money as I did, so I was saved the
humiliation of being turned away from the Scene or the Flamingo.
They said they wanted to hear some music, so I stu,ed my lea.ets
back into my satchel and took them to Beak Street, where there
was a basement club little bigger than my living room at Avon
Close, a cheap dark cellar where the management wasn’t particular
about the age of their clientele. I’d been there once or twice to
lean against the back wall and smoke an a,ected cigarette. It was
a place where I judged I wouldn’t be out of my depth.
Though it was early, the basement was packed with people
watching a band playing covers of American rhythm-and-blues
songs. At -rst we stood by a pillar, sipping our drinks to make them
last. Then I danced, -rst with So-e, then Freja, pressed close together
by the jostling crowd. The place was unbelievably hot. Within
minutes sweat was running down our faces and soaking our clothes.
Droplets of moisture dripped from the ceiling, barely a foot above
our heads. I danced with my eyes closed, dizzy and ecstatic. Freja
draped her arms round my neck and I squeezed her against me,
feeling her thighs moving under her damp cotton dress, the ridge
of the bra-line bisecting her back. Then, as the band sang uh uh
yeah yeah do you like it like that we were kissing, her -ngers scraping
away strings of wet blond hair from her mouth as we crushed our
faces together and my hands traveled over the curve of her buttocks,
the slippery nape of her neck. The hour of the last tube was edging
closer and with it would have to come some kind of decision, but
there was no contest, not really, because Freja was smiling and
grazing my cheek with her knuckles and conferring with So-e,
giggling and whispering as I stood apart and nodded my head to
the music, lighting a cigarette, tapping my foot yeah baby oh baby oh
in time and just to make sure taking o, my watch and slipping it
into my pocket.
By the time we left it was very late. We sat in a co,ee bar and
ate toasted sandwiches, smiling conspiratorially at one another.
So-e drew -ngertip patterns in spilled tea on the Formica tabletop
while Freja and I played footsie until there was no money left for
drinks and all three of us started to yawn. Finally I confessed I had
no way to get home, and they both laughed, as if I was being sly.
Freja told me they’d try to sneak me into their hotel, and led me
by the hand into Fitzrovia, to a townhouse in one of the bigger
squares with an illuminated sign above the door saying the Richmond or the Windsor or something House. We hung around
outside, prevaricating. Freja and I kissed and ran our hands over
each other, almost clawing each other in desperation. So-e hopped
up and down a discreet distance away, hugging herself against the
cold.
As they rang the bell for the porter, I hid out of sight. After a
minute or two someone came to the door and they disappeared
inside. I waited for a long time, crouching behind a pillar box across
the street. I began to feel lonely, suspecting that all the earlier
discussion at the club had been about how to get rid of me. The
stars were faint in a sky that was now turning from black to a
washed-out purple-gray. On the other side of the square a car
started up and pulled away, its engine sounding loud and hollow
in the silence.
I must have been dozing when Freja came back down to let me
in, because the -rst thing I heard was her voice hissing my name.
She was standing in the doorway, waving frantically. I ran over
and she pulled me up several .ights of thickly carpeted stairs to a
little room with two single beds and a huge mirrored wardrobe,
a looming Formica block that dominated the far wall like a
prehistoric monument. The lights were o, and the curtains half
drawn, letting through a dribble of predawn light that fell across
So-e, just a mound under the covers, pretending to be asleep.
Without looking at me Freja started to undress, stepping out of
her skirt and carefully folding it over the back of a chair. Too shy
to watch, I turned away and found myself confronted with her
double image in the wardrobe doors: the curve of her back, her
birdlike shoulders. She unhooked her bra, struggled into a long
cotton nightie, and dived into bed. “Hurry up,” she whispered.
“Get undressed and get in.”
Gray hands unbuttoned a gray shirt. I was self-conscious: though
I couldn’t see her eyes in the half-light, I knew she was watching
me. I got down to my underwear and crawled beneath the blankets
and we tried to sti.e our laughter as we wrapped ourselves around
each other. She smelled of sweat and cigarette smoke. I kissed her
salty face and her tongue darted out from her hot dry mouth. My
body was a single nerve, thrumming with each small urgent movement, each shift in position. Her mouth at my ear. Her exploring
hand.
Several times in my life I’ve gone through long periods without
sex or any other kind of physical contact. The hunger it produces
is deep and low; it’s possible to lose track of it, to forget or fail to
perceive how it’s emptied everything out of you and made the
world papery and thin. Touch starved, you brush against existence
like a stick against dry leaves. You become insubstantial yourself,
a hungry ghost.
I found the hard points of her nipples with my mouth, sliding
a hand into the extraordinary slipperiness between her legs. Her
nightdress rucked up round her waist, then, as I pushed it higher,
became a solid wad round her neck. I felt her lift up her arms and
snake out of it, a sudden rush of cold air sweeping in as her movement dislodged the blankets. Then her miraculous hand was on
my cock, slithering me into her as the covers fell away completely.
The cold somehow added to my excitement as I arched myself
back and forth. “Don’t squirt your stu, inside me,” she warned,
and I pulled out and came copiously onto the sheets. My moan
produced a kind of answering sigh in her, a long exhalation that
might have been melancholic or relieved or regretful or satis-ed,
all or none, I had no idea. I saw So-e was awake, watching us. Her
mouth was slack, her eyes glittering.
We rearranged the blankets and lay silently on the narrow bed.
I reached for Freja again but time had somehow passed and her
breathing was even and the light coming through the chink in the
grubby curtains was hard and strong, strong enough for me to see
that So-e was still watching. “You’ve got to go,” she said. “People
will wake up soon, and they can’t -nd you here.”
My head was swimming with lack of sleep. The daylight made
everything complicated; guilt lurked in the corners of the room. I
foraged for my clothes on the .oor and, with a quick glance at the
two girls, one asleep, the other staring, I tiptoed downstairs. From
behind the frosted-glass door in Reception came the sound of
someone moving around. I fumbled with the front-door latch, and
all at once I was standing outside in early-morning London, a place
of sunlight and milk .oats and street sweepers, tucking my shirt
in and realizing that I was miles from home and hadn’t even got
enough money for a bus fare.
There was a huge row, of course, but I didn’t much care. I
retreated to my bedroom to trace and retrace every minute of my
night, the quickly fading loops and whorls of happiness.
There were times like that later on, with Anna. In the squat, in
various shared beds and shared houses. Watching and being watched.
We had abolished privacy: we hoped guilt would go with it. Watching
could become anything. Mechanical or transcendent. It could leave
you open-mouthed, touching yourself. It could make you curl up
defensively, resenting the sel-sh animal sounds, the smell of other
people on the pillow into which you were pressing your face.
Brian moved out. Mum went back to the hospital, after she had
scratched a lot of skin o, her arms. While she was away, I moved
around the house in a strange cramped dance with Dad, trying
never to be in the same room. I could feel he wanted to talk to
me, which made me all the more intent on avoiding him. Above
all, I didn’t want him to try to make friends, not now that I was
-nally about to get away.
When my exam results came out, the -rst people I went to tell
were Maggie and Colin. I wanted Maggie to share my happiness:
I had my place at the LSE, my ticket out.
When Colin opened the door I waved my results paper at him.
“Hi, Colin. Guess where I’m going.”
He just stood there on the doorstep, staring blankly at me. “What
do you want?” he asked curtly. He didn’t invite me in.
“I just came over to tell you I got in.” I was hurt by his abruptness. He hadn’t said anything, hadn’t reacted at all to my wonderful
news. “And,” I added, trying to be polite, “to—to see how you
are.”
“Well, I’m bloody awful, if you’re interested.”
“Where’s Maggie?”
“Where’s Maggie? How the hell should I know?”
I was .oored by this response. He had a strange, twisted expression on his face. I couldn’t think of anything to say and it must
have shown.
He snorted and let out a humorless staccato laugh. “Sorry to
disappoint you, Christopher, but she’s not here. She’s gone and
she’s not bloody coming back, or at least that’s what she said in
her letter. So now you can turn round and piss o, home. I never
liked you sni/ng round her anyway. All that wide-eyed admiration
rubbish.”
“But—I never—”
“Oh, you never, all right. Not for want of trying, you dirty little
sod.”
“I didn’t, I swear. . . . What happened, Colin? Where did she
go?”
He mimicked my voice. “Where did she go? She left me, you
ass. She buggered o, to Ghana or Bongo-Bongo Land or somewhere to go and save the little black babies. So no more CND, no
more free food, no more singalongs, no nothing, comprende? It’s
over. Now fuck o, and leave me alone.”
And he slammed the door in my face.
I’ve often wondered what happened to Maggie. I can never
picture her. Perhaps she’s still in a classroom in Africa, the headmistress, the director of the orphanage. Perhaps she’s dead. And
then there’s Freja and So-e and all the others my daughter can’t
imagine, all the threats to the charmed circle of her-and-Mummyand-me. Which of them am I driving toward now? Is it really just
Anna?
***
By the time I reach the Paris périphérique I’ve fallen into a trance of
headlights and signage. Round I drive. Porte d’Orléans, Port d’Ivry.
Blossoming red lights, brake sharply, tra/c suddenly -ltering in
from a hidden slip-road, brake again. The road’s like a go-cart track,
one damn thing after another, running in and out of orange-lit
tunnels, through billboard-lined trenches and elevations. Was that
my exit? My eyes are tired of squinting into the darkness for—what
am I looking for? Porte d’Orléans. Didn’t I pass that already? I have
no idea of the time: Miranda never set the dashboard clock. Thirty
thousand pounds’ worth of high-status German engineering, but
she doesn’t set the clock. Round and round. Though I’m dog-tired,
I can’t face the complexity involved in turning o, and looking for
somewhere to sleep. So I carry on, round and round, Porte des
Lilas, Porte de Montreuil, right shoulder inward, circumambulating
the large stupa at Wat Tham Nok, following the line of chanting
monks, the tea light in its little clay bowl warming my hands.
Circling in the Aegean, the taste of salt on my lips, blank and free.
Round and round. Porte de Charenton. Trudging round the yard
at morning exercise. My revolutions: a hundred of us walking, two
abreast, inner ring clockwise, outer ring counter-clockwise. Back in
the days when Pentonville was the gateway to transportation, the
builders constructed an endless double path of .agstones, two
snakes eating their own tails, set into the black tar. The regime was
designed to isolate prisoners from all human contact. Face masks,
enforced silence. Round and round, a folk dance or a fairground
ride. Very important, they thought, never to give the scum a sense
of achievement.
I never found out why I came to be sent to HMP Pentonville.
It was the recidivists’ prison. Remand prisoners went to Brixton,
-rst-timers like me to the Scrubs. It had a bad reputation, which
a police constable gleefully told me all about as he led me out to
the “meat wagon,” a Black Maria with metal-grilled windows. “The
lags’ll have you for breakfast, you hippie cunt,” he told me cheerfully, as he locked me in.
As we got down from the van a gang of prison o/cers descended
on us, screaming like squaddies performing a bayonet charge. We
were doubled into a low hall, searched, and assembled into a ragged
line. The screws marched up and down, shouting at us to stand up
straight, poking us in the ribs and asking rhetorically if we knew
where we were. They locked us into small wooden cubicles, where
we stood in semidarkness while one of them read out the rules.
The purpose of prison was to encourage and assist us to lead a
good and useful life. We were to address all prison o/cers as “sir.”
We would be required to perform useful work for not more than
ten hours a day. Failure to obey an o/cer would be punished with
removal of privileges. The list went on. When we could receive
visits. When we could receive letters. More rules were written on
a card pasted to the wall in front of me in the co/nlike cubicle. I
peered at them as I waited. I was not to -ght or set -res. I was not
to possess a greater quantity of any article than I was authorized
to possess.
I was pulled out of the cubicle by a pair of POs, and taken to
the desks at the end of the room. Behind each desk sat a trusty
with a red armband, writing in a ledger. I was ordered to stand on
a scale and my weight was written down, along with my age and
occupation. “Religion?”
“None,” I answered.
“C of E, then,” said the prisoner-clerk.
“No, none,” I insisted. “I don’t believe in God.”
“That comes under C of E.”
I was frogmarched into a second room to stand before a PO
who occupied a stool behind a high desk, like a Dickensian clerk.
He ordered me to undress and as I took o, my clothes, they were
itemized and dropped into a cardboard box. I had to bend over and
spread my buttocks, then show the soles of my feet. Afterward I
was given a dressing gown and taken to the showers, where the
two POs escorting me shoved me into a stall and gave me an
unhurried beating. Thought I was Fidel Castro? Long-haired
wanker, I looked like a girl. They bet I took it like a girl. After a
while it didn’t hurt so much. Water spattered over me as I pressed
my cheek against the cold white tiles of the wall.
Round and round. Porte d’Orléans. Porte d’Orléans? Turning
circles in the sea. Walking round the stupa, mindfully placing one
foot in front of the other, counting my breaths. Round and round,
circling the Old Building steps, under a banner that read, archly,
BEWARE THE PEDAGOGIC GERONTOCRACY. Exactly the kind of thing
nonstudents sneered at as studenty. It had taken only a few weeks
at the LSE for that clever-clever tone to wear thin. Still, I knelt
under that same banner to have my picture taken for the newspaper,
along with all the other sitters-in, clever young people trying to
look serious and committed and political, which would have been
easier if they’d stopped grinning like chimps.
We were in occupation. Smile! Speak into the mike. “It’s not
even about Adams per se, it’s what he represents. In Rhodesia he
did nothing. He didn’t oppose the UDI, didn’t speak out when they
started to arrest his students. The administration paints a picture
of him as oh-so-brave, keeping his mixed college open while the
Fascist, racist regime was consolidating power. But what’s that? Just
collusion, as far as we’re concerned. Now he’s foisted on us as LSE
director and we’re supposed to accept it without question.” It was
freezing at night. None of us was prepared for a sit-in. No sleeping
bags, no food. They locked the doors open, hoping that would be
enough to get rid of us. A lot of people did slope o, home.
There are moments from those eight days of occupation that
stand out, images that over time have become unmoored from
their context, .oating free in my memory. Rolling a joint and
passing it round with three friends as we sat by an open upstairs
window, listening to a police inspector barking orders through a
megaphone. Two students from my year busking folk songs and
rattling a tin. I had sex with a girl called Tricia in the toilets of the
administration building. She wasn’t anything to do with the university, just one of the people who’d appeared out of the woodwork,
attracted by the spark of possibility .itting temporarily around our
stu,y college. There were mysterious middle-aged men with .asks
of tea and sheaves of self-printed lea.ets, feral-looking hippies,
delinquent teens, raggedy thirties Marxists looking to warm their
hands at the revolutionary -re.
You could make something out, dimly, through the blizzard of
opinion that seemed to surround even the simplest question
of right and wrong: change, the sense that everything was in play,
all verities suspended. We were getting telegrams from the CGT
union in Barcelona, from Bertrand Russell. We were a sign of
something, the canaries in the capitalist coal mine, the Vanguard.
We issued self-important statements: “L: =6K: 8=6AA:C<:9 6C9
8DCI>CJ: ID 8=6AA:C<: I=: L6N >C L=>8= AH: H:GK:H I=:
C::9H D; I=: GJA>C< 8A6HH >C EGDK>9>C< I=: G><=I B6CEDL:G
HIGDC<:G >9:DAD<N 6C9 G:H:6G8= I=6I B6@:H :MEAD>I6I>DC
6C9 DEEG:HH>DC D; I=: LDG@>C< 8A6HH:H BDG: :;;>8>:CI.”
Early one morning we broke into the administration building,
barging past the night porter when he opened the door. We milled
around in the corridor outside the director’s o/ce, built barricades
of chairs and desks and metal shelving, scribbled on the backs of
notices, trying to formulate a statement for the press. I slept for a
few hours, curled up with Tricia on the .oor by a radiator. After
a while I felt her get up. “Got to go toilet,” she said. “Go toilet,”
like a child. She never came back. A week or two after the occupation I started to itch and went to visit the doctor, who gave a short
speech about living in an era of moral confusion and used Latin
to tell me I had crabs. Pacing up and down in my room, slathered
in white cream from knee to chest, I read a letter from the university authorities saying that as a result of my participation in the
sit-in I would be -ned, but no further action would be taken.
Round and round. Did I agree with the written record of my
personal e,ects? The deputy governor’s Home Counties voice was
crisp with authority regularly exercised and obeyed. Club tie, thick
plastic-rimmed glasses, pompous donkey-face made longer by its
mutton-chop sideburns. Beside him, shu0ing papers and glowering
at me, sat the stern, crop-haired chaplain in the role of the Church
Militant. The welfare o/cer was asleep, from the look of him,
hunched over his notes like a great black beetle. He didn’t move
at all during the interview, presenting me with his balding crown,
a featureless pink oval that I gradually came to think of as his
face.
Yes, I said. I agreed with the written record of my personal
e,ects.
The chaplain said he believed I was Church of England, and
looked forward to seeing me in chapel. I’d derive much sustenance
from attending services. The deputy governor wanted me to take
the opportunity to ask myself some hard questions. I was an
educated fellow. He hoped I’d come to see that my posture of
rebellion was essentially immature. We were living in changing
times, which made it all the more regrettable that certain irresponsible social elements were leading some of our best and
brightest to squander their advantages, advantages most of the
young lads in this place would give their eye teeth for. Watching
one hand seamlessly over to the other, I started, for the -rst time
since my trial, to recover myself. God-man and state-man, working
in concert, indistinguishable in their pose of bland benevolence.
When I moved I could feel the bruises from the previous day’s
beating. Fuck you, I thought. Fuck you and your polite, civilized
tone. Fuck your unearned air of authority, your smug talk about
advantages, as if the world is some kind of game you’re
refereeing.
Round and round. Miles’s question. What would freedom look
like? That -rst university summer, instead of going home, I’d
crashed on the sofa of a friend’s house in Muswell Hill. I found a
temporary job at a small factory in Archway, which made control
panels for industrial equipment. I had to sit at a bench, screwing
glass dial-facings and Bakelite knobs to anodized aluminum plates.
It was easy enough work, and well paid. After a month I had enough
money to travel, and set o, for Europe. It was my -rst time abroad.
I sat on the ferry’s rear deck, watching the coast of England recede
behind me. In Ostend I showed my brand new passport to a smiling
immigration o/cial, who waved me through into Belgium with
such warmth that I felt I’d been given the keys to the kingdom.
Soon I was on a sleeper train heading south. I lay awake for hours
in my upper berth, listening to the whistles and slamming doors
of nighttime stations, the labored breathing of the middle-aged
Dutch businessman in the bunk below.
I spent a month and a half sleeping in youth hostels or on station
platforms, making .eeting alliances with other travelers to share a
ride or a meal or an evening in a bar. I went to sleep in one country
and was woken up by the border police of the next, fumbling
blearily for my documents as another unfamiliar landscape took
shape through the window. I wanted to travel far and fast and rarely
stayed anywhere for longer than a night, passing through Berlin,
Vienna, and Rome without really seeing them. When I arrived in
a new place there was always a moment of choice, of having to
-nd something to do with myself. I had very little money. I saw a
lot of parks. I was most content listening to wheels on a track, the
sound that con-rmed I was going farther on, farther out. Finally
I found myself swimming o, a beach on a rocky Greek island,
turning circles in the water, my world reduced to a dazzle of white
light. If someone were to ask me when and where I was happiest,
I’d describe that afternoon swim.
Circle the yard then back up to the threes, walkways above and
below, a palimpsest of girders and wire netting. My cell had a single
grilled window high up on the wall, made of little four-inch panes
of muddy glass. Sit, stare, eat slops from a pressed metal tray. Ninethirty sharp, lights out. Bad dreams on a narrow bed, cut through
by the reveille bell. The best moment of the day was the -rst step
onto the landing, where there was light and space, a distance on
which to -x your eyes. At morning employment we sat, elbow to
elbow, in a low-roofed atelier, dismantling old electrical equipment.
Radios, televisions. It was like being in the back of Parker’s, with
my dad. Once we were given a pile of Second World War gas masks
and spent a couple of days unscrewing the -lters, cutting the glass
eye panels away from the rubber. I never found out what happened
to the parts we salvaged. I suspect they were just thrown away.
Lunch in the cell. Three slops in the molded metal tray and a
cup of stewed tea. Afterward, locked in. For an hour or two after
a meal, the sharp tang of boiled cabbage hung over the wing. Once
every few days a trusty pushed a library cart along the landings.
Usually it had nothing on it but religious tracts or textbooks, but
for a while I lived with a tattered old copy of The Scarlet Pimpernel,
its green cloth binding shiny with years of use. I’d never liked
-ction, never seen the point in something that wasn’t real; Baroness
Orczy’s class-ridden Paris did nothing to change that. Her heroes
were blameless gentry and the common people were “human only
in name, for to the eye and ear they seemed naught but savage
creatures, animated by vile passions and by the lust of vengeance
and of hate.” Disgusted, I started to imagine another book, the
mirror-image of the one I was reading, peopled by greedy, vicious
aristocrats and starving sans-culottes dreaming of a better world.
Harris, the man who sat beside me in the dismantling shop, liked
to gossip. Who owed money or cigarettes. Who’d got a new radio
or a rug in their cell. After the -rst few days I stopped listening,
but the details of Harris’s life had got in by osmosis, the wife who
was de-nitely waiting but hadn’t visited for the last three months,
the mate who was going to give him a job when he got out. He
kept o,ering me things—cigarettes, girlie mags, once a pair of
shoes he said he didn’t want. I always refused, though I was tempted
by the shoes. My prison-issue boots were molded to the shape of
their previous owner’s feet, the heels worn down in a way that
forced me to walk with a strange pigeon-toed roll.
After a couple of weeks I was transferred to cleaning duty, scrubbing .oors, mopping spilled tea and soup o, staircases and landings.
After the dismantling shop it felt liberating, even luxurious. Pushing
a mop my mind could leave my body. I barely heard the screws
shouting at me when I dawdled. Round and round. I rocked back
and forth on my worn heels and dreamed of the island, of turning
in the water, the horizon stretching away from me in an in-nity
of blue.
One night, in a room above a noisy taverna, I’d counted my
money and realized I had barely enough to get back to England. I
would have to leave the next day, or the day after. Three nights
later I ate a dinner of dolmades and grilled -sh and drank a bottle
of red wine and three glasses of ouzo and decided to stay for good.
What did I have in England? I’d get one of the crumbling little
houses by the harbor and do it up. I’d learn to -sh. I tried to talk
to the taverna owner about it as he played dominoes with his friends
at a back table. I was drunker than I thought. Angry with me for
interrupting his game and unable to understand what I was saying,
he waved me away. I insisted, grabbing his shoulder and babbling
about -sh and houses and a local girl I’d spotted outside the church.
Eventually a couple of the players pushed me outside. Like a fool,
I tried to -ght them. Bruised and hung over, I left the island the
next morning.
On the overnight train trip from Bari to Milan I was joined in
my compartment by a man in a well-cut suit, who said he was
from Rimini and worked in local government. We talked for a
while, mostly about football. His English was stilted, but he knew
the names of all the current Spurs squad, reciting them one by
one, as if telling a rosary. He rummaged in his bag and pulled
out a bottle of a nasty-looking orange drink. I sipped some, just
to be polite. “Please, take more,” he said, smiling. “Please.” The
next thing I knew, it was daylight, I was alone, and the train was
pulling into a siding. The carriage was sti.ingly hot. I stumbled
out into the corridor and came face to face with a cleaner, who
gesticulated and shouted at me in Italian. The train was completely
empty. Sick and disoriented, I had to walk down the tracks back
to the station. Only when I tried to buy a ticket for my next
journey did I realize my camera had gone, along with the small
amount of cash I had left in my money belt.
I ended up begging from a middle-aged English couple who were
sitting at the station café. The wife believed my story. The husband
patently thought I was a liar, but handed over enough money for
a ticket to Calais, along with their address, “In case,” as he told me
drily, “you intend to do the decent thing.” At Calais I had to beg
again and this time wasn’t so lucky. I hung around in the ferry
terminal for hours, approaching every likely-looking person. Are
you English? Sorry to bother you. Eventually I was arrested. At the
gendarmerie they checked my documents, searched me, and let me
go again. By that time I hadn’t eaten for two days.
I was saved by a middle-aged homosexual who bought me a beer
and a sandwich in the terminal café. Wretchedly I told him my story,
and to my surprise he bought me a ferry ticket. On the crossing he
fussed over me, treating me to more drinks and food. He had a
racing green MG parked at Dover and I gratefully accepted a lift to
London. Eventually we drew up outside a mews house in Chelsea
and he said, enunciating pointedly, that he thought we should have
a little cocktail together. I let him unload my pack from the boot,
then staggered away down the street, while he tugged at my sleeve
and swore at me in a sort of stage whisper so as not to wake the
neighbors. I walked all the way to Muswell Hill and, after emptying
my friend Alan’s fridge, lay down on his sofa and slept twenty straight
hours, waking up with a start in the middle of the night in the
deluded belief that I was still on a train.
Round and round. The rhythm of wheels on a track. With about
twenty hours of solitude a day, I had plenty of time to think in
prison. If Pentonville was a factory, what would it make? If it was
a machine, what was it designed to do? I spent hours running
through my memories. I thought about when I’d been happy and
unhappy, the times when I’d been closest to feeling there was a
future. The more I thought, the clearer the moral landscape
appeared. There seemed to be two worlds. One was basic and
sensual, a human-scale place of small tasks and pleasures, building
things and eating good food, lying in the sun, making love. In this
world, human relations were very simple. The desire to dominate,
to own and to control, just didn’t arise. The other world, the world
of Law and War and Institutions, was a strange and abstract place.
In this mirror-world I was a violent person and had to be punished
because violence was a monopoly of the state. I’d somehow authorized the British government to distribute violence on my behalf,
which it did through various branches of o/cialdom—the army,
the police, the Pentonville screws. The problem was that I couldn’t
remember giving my consent. What paper had I signed? Where
had I said I wished to regulate my habits and govern my sexual
behavior and strive for advancement in various abstract games
whose terms had been set before I was born? The state claimed it
was an expression of the democratic will of the people. But what
if it wasn’t? What if it was just a parasite, a vampire sustaining
itself on our collective life, on my life in particular?
***
I was released in the last week of April 68. No one was there to
meet me. I was relieved not to see Dad or Brian, whose single visit
had been as bad as anything else that had happened to me in prison,
but I’d hoped some of my Vietnam Action Group friends would
be at the gate. So much, I thought, for solidarity. But I’d had a
short letter from Alan in Muswell Hill, saying he was storing my
stu, and I should go over there when I got out, so that was where
I headed.
I bought a paper from a newsstand and read it as I waited for
the bus. I found it hard to concentrate on the news. It felt too good
to be wearing my own clothes, my own shoes, standing on the
Caledonian Road looking at rows of houses blackened with grime
from the railway yards. Beautiful pigeons, beautiful old man in his
vest, smoking a cigarette and watching the beautiful street from
an upstairs window.
Back at the Muswell Hill house Alan shook my hand and asked
how I was. I didn’t know what to say, so I told him I was OK. We
drank tea, standing in the overgrown garden, where one of his
housemates was storing a partially dismantled scooter. I expected
Alan to be curious about prison, but he didn’t ask any questions
at all. He seemed -dgety and distracted. “They’ve suspended you,”
he told me. If I wanted to continue at university I’d have to begin
my second year again in the autumn. I asked him what was being
done. Were any of the activist groups at the LSE going to support
me? He looked uncomfortable and wouldn’t meet my eye. “The
thing is, you were convicted of a crime. That doesn’t make it very
easy, politically.”
I took in this unwelcome information as he told me his news,
which consisted of gossip about various LSE factions, who’d slept
with whose girlfriend, who’d taken what line on the Powellite
dockers’ march. As he chattered, I realized he hadn’t the slightest
conception of what had happened to me. As soon as I’d disappeared
into the police van, he’d more or less forgotten my existence. The
last straw was his announcement that he’d “something rather delicate to discuss.” His housemates had told him they’d rather I didn’t
stay there. They were worried about police attention, didn’t want
to jeopardize their degrees. He was sorry. Naturally he’d argued,
but it was a democratic household. He’d been outvoted.
I couldn’t believe my ears. My so-called comrades were washing
their hands of me, self-proclaimed revolutionaries so timid that at
the -rst sign of trouble they were running away. Without raising
my voice I told Alan he was a coward, a middle-class fraud. He’d
been with me on that demo: it could have been him who’d gotten
arrested. I’d just spent a month in jail, I had about ten bob in my
pocket and he wasn’t even going to let me kip on his couch? He
mumbled something about there being hash in the house. But did
I need money? My lip curled. Money, of course. The bourgeois
solution. I extended my hand. He couldn’t get his wallet out fast
enough.
I took the bus into town and went to a steak house just o,
Leicester Square, where I ordered all the most expensive things on
the menu and drank a bottle of red wine. The waiters looked at
me uneasily until I actually waved a banknote at them. From a
phone booth outside I rang a girl I knew called Vicky, who lived
in her parents’ basement in Holland Park. Yes, she said, I could
stay with her.
I took a taxi, giving the driver a tip to get rid of the last of Alan’s
cash. Vicky seemed excited to see me. Her place was impressive,
a self-contained garden .at on a winding side-street of elegant
Victorian houses. I found out later that her father was on the board
of a mining company with interests in southern Africa. She was
riddled with guilt about where her money came from and did all
she could to antagonize her family while still living under their
roof. I was part of that strategy.
We talked and smoked a joint and she asked all the questions
about prison I’d expected from Alan. I told her a little of what had
happened, in a series of rambling and elliptical answers, which she
broke short by taking me to bed. Later I lay awake and listened to
her breathing. We didn’t know each other well and I’d gone round
there for the most cynical reasons: I knew she liked me; I knew
she had her own place. Still, it felt good to lie beside her in the
darkness, even if I couldn’t sleep.
I stayed at Vicky’s for a week or so, smoking her dope and playing
her LPs. She had a job volunteering with a playgroup on Portobello
Road and left me alone during the day. I spent my time lying on
her .oor looking at the patterns the light made as it -ltered through
the branches of the monkey-puzzle tree in the garden. If Vicky
minded my lethargy, she didn’t show it. I think she could see how
low I was feeling. I only left the .at to go walking in Holland Park,
long, aimless afternoon meanderings through the formal gardens,
during which I looked at my feet and kept as far away from other
people as possible. Elsewhere, Parisians were building barricades.
I wandered around and listened to music and ignored the washingup. On the weekend Vicky told me she was driving to the country
and asked if I wanted to come. I said no. Alone in her .at, I spent
a day and night completely motionless in a chair, not thinking
about anything in particular, just cradling myself inside a sort of
glacial depression. I felt as if I was mummi-ed, living inside some
kind of membrane that formed a -nal and de-nitive barrier to
human contact. The bright light outside was a mockery: energy
radiating across the whole world, none of it for me.
***
I knew Miles wouldn’t leave me alone. Two days after I’d seen him
at the Market Cross, I answered the phone in the kitchen. I’d been
-lling the dishwasher, while Miranda sat at the table .icking
through a gardening catalogue. “Hello, Chris,” said the voice at
the other end. Re.exively, I hung up.
“Who was that?” asked Miranda.
“Wrong number.”
The phone rang again. I stood there, paralyzed.
“Aren’t you going to answer it?”
I picked up. I had no choice.
“Listen to me, Chris,” said the voice. I assumed it was Miles. It
didn’t sound like him.
“I think you have the wrong number.”
“Don’t be stupid about this.”
“I told you, you have the wrong number. Don’t call here
again.”
I slammed the phone down, trying to master the tide of adrenalin rising through my body.
“Who were you talking to?”
“Just some guy. He thinks this is his friend’s place. He sounds
strange.”
“You were very aggressive with him.”
I shrugged noncommittally. Again, the phone rang. Miranda got
up to answer it. “Don’t,” I told her sharply. She put up her hands
in mock surrender. The phone carried on ringing. After a while it
clicked through to the answering machine.
“This is a message for Chris,” said the voice. “Listen, mate, don’t
piss about. You need to phone me. For your own good, you should
phone me.” He left a cell number.
“You’d think people would actually listen to the message,” said
Miranda, vaguely. “It says quite clearly ‘Miranda and Michael
Frame.’ ”
My throat was dry. I poured a glass of water from the -lter
pitcher. “Yes,” I said. “You’d think they would.”
After Miranda went to bed, I slipped out and drove over to the
shop. God wasn’t there, so I was able to sit for a while in comforting
darkness, huddling into my jacket and rubbing my hands as I waited
for the gas heater to cut through the cold. I was thinking seriously
about leaving. How far would I get if I made a run? If I went
straight to the airport, would I be able to board a plane?
I switched on the ancient Anglepoise on the desk and sifted listlessly through a pile of Left Book Club volumes. The dreams of
the thirties and forties; Spain and the hunger marches. They were
fragile objects, those books, their yellowing pages .aky and brittle,
about ten years away from dust. Soon, as I knew I would, I found
myself taking another look through the unsorted sixties and seventies box. I opened copies of Socialist Worker to read about Grunwick
and Blair Peach, events I’d missed because I was in Thailand. Why
had God even bought all that stu,? As far as I knew, he was an
old-fashioned Tory. Englishman’s home is his castle, the whole bit.
I was about to put the box away when I found a copy of the International Times, which fell open to a collage of a jazz-age -gure in
a sweater and plus-fours operating a hand-cranked camera. The
man’s head had been replaced by a -st. Out of the camera lens
spilled a cornucopia of bodies and .owers and abstract forms. Ri.es
and feathers and halftone dots. Biafran children, Chairman Mao. I
knew that image. It had been on a .yer someone had handed me
on Portobello Road, the day I -nally roused myself and walked
out of Vicky’s basement:
FREE PICTURES
No politics but the politics of experience!
Toward a revolutionary reconstruction of society.
Construct zones of liberation, counterinstitutions, alternative systems of exchange.
Reject the bankrupt logic of submission and
domination.
Saturday Free Pictures 21 Albany Square
London W11
Shoeless, I wandered down into Notting Hill. The streets were
lined with decaying mansion houses, peeling and sooty, with
rubbish piled up in their once-elegant porches. Here and there West
Indian men sat out on the steps enjoying the weather, talking or
slamming down dominoes. Gangs of wild children ran between
the parked cars. On some streets, half the houses were empty, their
boarded-up windows like sightless eyes. I sat in a pub for much of
that afternoon, listening to the sounds of the street market winding
down outside. The public bar was populated by old boys who sat
silently smoking and watching their pints fall inch by inch in their
glasses. The fruit machine chirruped the fake promise of money.
I was backing Britain. We were all backing Britain. The good times
were coming our way. If I didn’t leave immediately, I knew I’d end
up another lost soul, my arse moistening the leatherette forever.
Out in the world, it was getting late. The light had softened
and Portobello Road was carpeted with rotting vegetables. I
wandered northward, ignoring the people who called out at me
or stared at my bare feet. In side streets, music -ltered out of
upstairs windows and young white girls talked to black men in
smart cars. In a quiet square I found myself outside a disused
cinema, a shabby deco façade tacked on to a redbrick building
that had probably once been a church meeting hall. The doors
were covered with sheets of corrugated iron and a sign warned
of dire penalties for trespassers. From the pavement the place
looked deserted. On the unlit marquee, the word FREE had been
spelled out in red letters.
Clutching the .yer, I banged on the sheeting. There was no
answer. I banged some more. Eventually, a voice on the other side
asked who I was.
“My name’s Chris,” I said. “Is there a—a happening here?”
The person on the other side did something with bolts and
padlocks. The door opened a crack and I stepped into a darkened
foyer smelling of cigarettes and stale beer.
All I could see was a silhouette. Jacket. Curly hair sprouting from
the sides of a peaked usher’s cap. “Who do you know?” he asked.
“No one, really. This is it, right? Free Pictures?”
He thought for a while, examined me. “You’d better come in.
Everyone’s on the roof. Watch your step, there are holes. Also
rats.”
Underfoot the carpet was sticky. The usher, who’d completed
his out-t with army boots and what looked like an old-fashioned
.oral skirt, shambled ahead of me into the auditorium, a murky,
cryptlike space. The air was tinged with damp. From the ceiling,
just visible in the gloom, hung an unlit chandelier, an ominous
mass festooned with cobwebs, like a prop from a horror movie.
The electricity was obviously borrowed from elsewhere; just above
head height sagged runs of cable, looping round sconces, draped
over the plaster cherubs on the little balcony. Here and there light
-ttings had been wired up, bare bulbs hanging down to brighten
little circles of moth-eaten red plush. The usher took me behind
the screen, where a narrow staircase led into a dusty gallery. From
there we climbed a ladder out onto the .at roof.
In the afternoon sunlight, a young woman was reading from a
typescript to a crowd of about thirty people, who lounged around
on rugs and broken plush seats. She spoke with a seriousness
accentuated by her extreme pallor and by her clothes, a shapeless
man’s sweater and a headscarf that dragged her hair severely back
from her scalp. It was an appearance that suggested a punishing
lack of self-regard. “More,” she was saying, “is not the issue. We
have more cars and fridges, more summer holidays in Fascist Spain.
In fact, we have more of everything except life and freedom.” She
spoke about the pressure to compete, how it was destroying basic
social formations. Atomized workers were convenient for capital,
free of attachments to each other, to place, even to time.
As she spoke it dawned on me gradually that I recognized her.
Eventually I was certain she was the girl I’d seen throwing the
stone at Grosvenor Square. She looked haunted, as if she hadn’t
slept for days. I thought she was beautiful. She sat down and was
immediately succeeded by a guy with a messy Afro and a German
accent, who told us it was no good to talk theoretically, or to
make a politics on the basis of a theory—any theory whatsoever.
That would just mean swapping one set of masters for another.
It was time to throw everything up in the air, to live in a radically
di,erent way. Out of that would come a politics based on material
conditions.
Someone handed me a joint. I found a place to sit where I could
rest my back against the parapet wall and check out the girl, who
was sitting with a group of friends, nervously jigging one foot up
and down and smoking a cigarette. These people were wilder and
more ragged-looking than student crowds, where you’d still see
sports jackets, combed hair. Most political meetings I’d attended
happened against a background of whispering and poorly masked
boredom. This had a di,erent atmosphere, intense and anxious.
“Freedom begins with the self,” called out a woman from the .oor,
and the freedom she was speaking about seemed to be present up
there on the cinema roof, a -erce astringent energy, a .ensing away
of the past.
A man got to his feet and started stabbing a -nger at the speakers.
“Bullshit!” he snarled. “Total bullshit! Everything you said is stupid
and naïve. You’re fools if you imagine revolution is going to happen
in the way you just described—like some kind of light show. Blobs
joining together to make bigger blobs? It’s just crap!”
He was a menacing presence, piratically bearded, listing to starboard, a lit cigarette stuck to his bottom lip. From behind me
someone called out to him not to be insulting. He turned round,
spreading his arms. “Why not? If you talk shit you deserve to be
insulted. It’s not about the self. The self is reactionary crap. It’s
about mass mobilization.” Someone else yelled out in agreement
and suddenly the thing was a free-for-all. A bespectacled guy in a
sort of shapeless smock was shouted down when he accused
everyone else of being repressed. The ascetic young woman told
the pirate his mass line was boring. The pirate told her to grow
up. Revolution wasn’t going to happen without someone seizing
power. It was going to take struggle. It was going to be violent.
The woman shook her head vehemently. She was opposed to all
forms of violence. It made no sense to her to employ violence to
end violence. The pirate, unusually for a pirate, quoted Mao: “We
are advocates of the abolition of war, we do not want war. But
war can only be abolished through war, and in order to get rid of
the gun, it is necessary to take up the gun.” There were cheers.
He seemed exasperated. “Just use your heads!” he spat. “As soon
as the workers’ state becomes even a distant possibility, they’ll try
to crush it. What do you imagine? That they’ll let your amorphous
liberated blobs incorporate factories and army barracks?”
The ascetic woman called him a casuist. “Get back in the
kitchen!” shouted a male voice. “Leave the revolution to people
who understand politics!” That caused a proper row. An avenger
threw some sort of liquid over the misogynist, a skinny, shirtless
boy who had to be restrained from throwing punches. The -ght
disturbed the transvestite usher, who disappeared downstairs.
Meanwhile the verbal tanks rolled back and forth. Look at the
Soviet Union. But that’s not Communism. Immediate union with
the working class! War on the nuclear family! Gradually the light
failed and people started to slip o,, as the hard core wrapped
themselves in coats and blankets against the chill.
Seize power, abolish power. Which did I want? I spoke only once,
to make some kind of call for immediate action. I don’t remember
what I said, just what I felt as I said it. There was an energy up on
that roof, an urgency I didn’t understand at the time.
***
At God’s desk I fell asleep for an hour or two and dreamed Anna
Addison was standing by a window, looking at me. I woke up in
freezing darkness and stumbled around disoriented until I remembered where I was. I locked up the shop and drove home in a
bizarrely altered state, dazzled by sleet and memory and oncoming
headlights. I undressed in the bathroom and crept into bed beside
Miranda, who grumbled and shifted over, her naked side hot as a
ham against my hand.
The next morning I got up late. Miranda had already left for
work. I made myself breakfast and ate it standing up, staring out
of the kitchen window. I went for a long walk, which didn’t solve
anything. I didn’t call the number on the answering machine.
The day after that, Sam came home from university. I picked
her up from the station and was almost overcome by her breezy
hug. My eyes watery, I told her I loved her and she patted me
complacently on the knee, already deep into a story about someone
called Susanna, who had an orange Beetle and wanted to take her
horseback riding in Wales. The girl with the neat row of teddies
waiting on her bed had acquired a nose stud and a noticeably
di,erent accent, a layer of London posh sprinkled over her ordinary
voice. She was, she said, a bit disappointed with law. She was
thinking of switching to psychology. It was all too much to absorb
at once, this sudden .uidity, these changes. She seemed so happy.
I was so happy for her.
I dropped her at home and while she unpacked I went out to
buy something for lunch. When I got back, I heard voices in the
kitchen.
“Hello, Dad. I’ve been hearing all about you.”
I froze in the doorway. It took me a moment to assemble the
scene. Miles at the kitchen table, his black coat draped over the
chair-back, a mug of co,ee in his hands. He smirked and raised
an eyebrow. “Hi, Mike,” he said, emphasizing the name slightly,
just enough so I’d pick up on it. “I came by on the o, chance.”
“I see.”
Sam laughed. “Miles says he knew you in the old days. He says
you weren’t always such a goody-goody.”
“Is that what he says?”
Her tone wouldn’t have been so light if he’d told her anything
serious. I put the shopping down. They were, I saw, both smoking
cigarettes. I lit one too. Miles sat back in his chair, enjoying himself.
Sam adopted a conspiratorial tone. “Miles says you got arrested
together. Protesting against the war, man!” She made a peace sign
at me, giggling.
“What else does he say?”
“Oh, don’t worry,” drawled Miles. “I haven’t been telling her
about the really naughty stu,.” Sam’s grin faltered a little when she
saw the look on my face. Miles distracted her by telling a tall story
about how he and I had supposedly spent an evening with the
Rolling Stones. His anecdote had a rehearsed quality. It was, at least
as far as my involvement in it was concerned, a complete fabrication. Miles evidently assumed Sam would be impressed by the
mention of the Stones, but she listened with a polite, slightly puzzled
expression. It was possible she didn’t know who they were.
How was I going to get him out of my house? I asked whether
he’d like to go for a walk. “Pub?” he suggested, then theatrically
corrected himself. “Oh, yes, I forgot. You don’t drink.”
“We could go to the pub if you like,” I told him. His smile
broadened. He knew I was begging. “It’s a bit cold out,” he said,
warming his hands on his co,ee cup. “Much more cozy in here.”
Just then I heard the sound of the key in the front door. Miranda
smelled the smoke before she even entered the room. “What on
earth are you doing?” she asked me angrily, .inging open the back
door and letting in a blast of icy air. Then she noticed Sam and
Miles. “Hello, darling. And—hello.”
Miles got up from his seat. “Miles Bridgeman. Old friend of
Mike’s.”
“Miranda Martin.”
They shook hands and she turned to me in genuine surprise.
“You didn’t say you had anyone—I mean—”
Sam stood up and embraced her. “Hello, Mum.”
“Hello, darling. You stink of cigarettes.”
“That’s a nice welcome.”
“Well, you do. It’s disgusting. I’m sorry, Mr. Bridgeman. I don’t
like smoking in the house.”
“I’m so sorry. Mike, you should have told me. Now I’ve gone
and embarrassed myself. And please, Miranda, call me Miles.”
“Of course. I’m sorry—were we, I mean—I was—was Mike
expecting you? I didn’t know. He never tells me anything.”
Miles adopted a ra/sh expression. “No, I think I came as a
surprise. You know, we haven’t seen each other for years. I was
visiting friends near here and thought I’d look him up. You have a
beautiful house, by the way. I love what you’ve done to this kitchen.
So real. What gorgeous .ooring. Is it slate?”
“Yes. Welsh slate.”
“Beautiful colors.”
“Exactly.”
Soon Miles was asking her about the old glass medicine bottles
and the bunches of herbs drying over the hearth, demonstrating a
suspiciously perfect knowledge of the properties of lemon verbena.
Miranda chattered to him, so taken with my charming friend that
before I knew it she’d invited him to stay for dinner. I sat at the
table while she cooked a risotto, and he bared his teeth without
mirth, toasting me ironically with his glass of elder.ower cordial.
“Next time,” he said, “I’ll bring a bottle.”
“So what kind of work do you do, Miles?” asked Miranda, as
we sat down to eat.
“Consultancy.”
“What kind?”
“Public a,airs. I spend a lot of time at Westminster, doing
strategy work for various people, generally oiling the wheels of
democracy.”
“Sounds exciting.”
“It’s very dull.”
“So are you Labour or Tory?” asked Sam.
“Neither. I’m my own man. I like to think of myself as a
progressive.”
His own man. Whatever Miles was it wasn’t that. Miles Bridgeman
would always be someone’s creature. To Sam and Miranda’s delight,
he told more anecdotes about our supposed exploits back in the old
days, slaloming in and out of the truth, adding deft little touches,
hidden allusions, subtle reminders to me of all the other things he
wasn’t telling. I was completely powerless, as removed from the situation as an accident victim, .oating above the scene, looking down.
He made a few slipups, such as telling Miranda we’d known each
other at university. Unlike Chris Carver, Michael Frame hadn’t gone
to university. I improvised. “I was only there for that one term,
remember? Then I dropped out.” He was quick to take the hint
and I had the disturbing sense that we were now colluding with
each other, jointly spinning a yarn. It was a story tailored to its
audience, a confection of swinging London and San Francisco
.ower-power, as phoney as one of those television nostalgia shows
where they soundtrack archive footage with old Top hits.
Miranda and Sam lapped it up.
“It’s so great you came, Miles,” said Miranda. “Mike never talks
about any of this. I had no idea he was so involved in that sixties
milieu.” She made it sound remote, historical. Waterloo or the
Armada. Miranda’s youth was all punk bands and cider, or whatever
they had to drink in Hendon. Sam’s primary reference point was
probably Austin Powers. “You know, Mike doesn’t have any photos
from back then,” mused Miranda. “He barely mentions it at all.
He’s so unsentimental. Actually, I think you’re the -rst person I’ve
met . . .” She trailed o,.
I knew exactly what she was thinking. Miles was the -rst person
she’d ever met who’d known me for longer than she had. I could
see the starkness of it clouding her mind, an oddity about her life
that she hadn’t noticed before.
“So you haven’t kept in touch with the old gang?” Miles asked
me sweetly. I shook my head. “Not even Anna and Sean?”
“Who are Anna and Sean?” asked Sam.
My mouth was dry. Miles left me on the hook for a while, cocking
his head to one side and examining me with a vaguely scienti-c
air. Then he answered himself: “Just a couple we knew. Although—
weren’t you and Anna, you know? Didn’t you have a thing for a
while?”
Now Miranda and Sam were all ears.
“She was your girlfriend?”
“You’ve never spoken about any Anna.”
Sam smelled gossip. “What was she like?”
“Go on,” says Miles. “Tell her.”
“She wasn’t my girlfriend. I haven’t heard anything about either
of them.”
Sam frowned at me.
Miles rubbed his chin. “Shame,” he said.
Miranda was frustrated. “I don’t know why you’re being so
tight-lipped, Mike. I’m not going to be jealous of some lover you
had thirty years ago. It’s part of you.” She patted my hand, made
big eyes. How hungry she was for this. How I’d starved her.
“Did you go traveling together?” she asked peevishly, when it
became clear I wasn’t going to say anything voluntarily.
“No. We last saw each other just before I left.”
Miles served himself another scoop of ice cream. “So where did
you go, Mike? India, was it? You never told me at the time.”
“I was in India for a while. I went overland through Asia. I spent
several years in Thailand.”
“How very interesting. Bangkok?”
“For a while.”
Miranda cued up her favorite line. “Mike was in a monastery.”
Miles looked wry. “Really, Mike? That surprises me.”
“Why?” asked Miranda.
“Well, he was never really into the spiritual side of things. He
was more of a political animal. So you became a Buddhist,
Mike?”
“Yes.”
“And you’re still a Buddhist?”
“No—at least, not in any meaningful way.”
“But you don’t eat meat.”
“Neither of us does,” said Miranda.
“Simplicity. Nonviolence. I admire you.” Again that predatory
grin.
It dragged on for hours, but at last Miles looked at his watch and
decided it was over. He had, he said, a long drive back to London.
He ought to get going. Miranda hugged him and gave him some
samples of the new Bountessence men’s line. Sam kissed him on
the cheek. He handed me a card. “In case you lost the last one,” he
said. I walked him to his car, which was parked on the street
outside.
“So, you’ll come and see me.”
I nodded, defeated. “When?”
“I’ll let you know. I’ll phone you. Don’t let me down, Chris. You
won’t let me down, will you?”
No, I said, I wouldn’t let him down.
“You’re such a dark horse,” murmured Miranda, as we lay in
bed. She snuggled closer to me, eager to explore our new intimacy.
Thankfully she wasn’t con-dent enough to say Anna’s name.
***
Round and round. The sky’s getting lighter. I’m experiencing
momentary drop-outs, instants when my mind is completely blank.
When I -nally turn o, the périphérique I have a near-miss as
someone unexpectedly pulls out in front of me. Overreacting, I
jerk the wheel and scrape the near-side wing against the crashbarrier. That’s it. No more. I need to sleep, or at least close my
eyes. I think I’m on the right route now, somewhere in the southeastern sprawl of the Paris suburbs, heading out of the city. I pull
into a rest area, where I piss into a dark corner, broken glass
crunching under my feet. Leaning out of the passenger door, I
splash my face with bottled water, recline the car seat as far back
as it will go and lie down. For a while, headlights continue to pass
behind my eyelids. Then they stop.
I’m woken by a gloved hand tapping on the window. Daylight.
A pair of policemen are peering at me through the steamed-up
glass. I sit up with a jolt and open the door, rubbing my eyes.
There’s a certain amount of confusion, but the general gist is that
they want to see my passport. I dig through my luggage, wondering
if they’re going to arrest me. Perhaps I’m on some kind of list. As
they check my details, I get out and look around at the desolate
place where I’ve spent the night. Above me looms a row of huge
housing blocks, slabs of seventies concrete faced with cheerless
primary-colored panels. The rest area is a dumping ground for
HGV tires and building waste. The policemen ask me to walk up
and down, checking, I think, to see if I’m drunk. I see a row of
long black scratches on the car’s paintwork where I hit the barrier.
So do they, but -nally they let me go, repeating the word hôtel,
clearly and patiently, as one would to a child.
I drive away, checking in the rearview mirror to see if they’re
following me. A few kilometers down the road I stop at a service
station to -ll the tank. In the brightly lit café I drink a co,ee and
eat some kind of plastic-wrapped pastry, all sugar and synthetic
apple jam. I watch a truck driver .icking through a selection of
pornography at the news concession, carefully making his
choice. The sugar gives me a rush of clarity. Out of habit, I just
paid with my credit card. I’m angry with myself. So stupid,
leaving a trail.
Does it really matter? Perhaps not. They’re going to -nd me,
however careful I am. I have no resources. My choices are limited.
I want to speak to Anna before they catch up with me. I want to
hear how it was for her. I want her to say my name. After that,
they can do what they like.
I take a swig of bottled water, start the engine, and swing back
out on to the road. Round and round.
As that -rst afternoon at Free Pictures turned into evening,
people started to drift o, to their next destinations and the usher
was kept busy climbing up and down the ladder to let them out.
The girl who threw the stone left with a black man in a leather
jacket. I would have followed her, but I was reluctant to leave the
roof, knowing that as soon as I stepped on to the street I’d be back
on my own, in depressive limbo. The pirate who’d argued with the
other speakers also seemed annoyed to see her go. Sprawled next
to me, apparently exhausted, he swore under his breath, then
propped himself up on his elbows and announced that he was
hungry. I said I was too. “So,” he suggested, “let’s go get something
to eat.”
Even now it’s hard to talk about Sean Ward without romanticizing him. He was a handsome bastard, with a -ne, rather delicate
jawline he hid with a full beard, a crooked nose, wavy dark hair,
and heavy-lidded brown eyes. His looks were the -rst thing
everyone noticed about him and he knew what to do with them.
Red Sean, fucker of the unfuckable, charmer of the barmaid and
the arresting o/cer. To those who just remember him in the early
days, or who take their history from some of the frothier journalism
about Anna, the romance is all that survives. I’m almost invisible
in those books, a bearded oval in a couple of fuzzy group photos.
Sean is omnipresent—but somehow simpli-ed, bleached out into
some kind of revolutionary rock star. The pictures (of which there
are surprisingly few) tend to show him with rock-star accoutrements, dark glasses, his battered biker jacket. There he is, smoking
a cigarette, throwing an arm casually over Anna’s shoulders. There
he is, standing on a hillside in Wales, waving a huge .ag. As far as
the world’s concerned (if it’s concerned at all anymore), he’s just
a footnote to Anna’s story, and since she’s been so distorted, it’s as
if the real Sean, the Sean who was paranoid and generous and
self-denying and confrontational and just vain enough to have liked
those rock-star photos, has almost vanished behind a haze of
Byronic bullshit.
The other cardboard cut-out of Sean is, of course, the social
deviant, a member of the criminal classes led astray by a super-cial
engagement with politics. The stories about his hard-knock
upbringing aren’t exaggerated. He was from a sprawling LondonIrish clan that had disintegrated when he was a kid, spitting him
into a series of foster homes from which he ran away, then reformatory, from which he couldn’t. He’d stolen a car, or rather many
cars, but the one they got him for was a Jag he drove into a lamppost during some kind of police chase, aged -fteen. Even when I
knew him, he had a thing about fast cars, the more expensive the
better. I think there was an element of revenge, of abusing rich
men’s toys. Yes, he had no education in the traditional sense, except
what he’d given himself. Yes, he was impatient with theorizing, but
it was an earned impatience, one I came to share. When I -rst met
him at Free Pictures, all he wanted to talk about was books. It still
makes me angry to see him painted as some kind of noble savage,
a thug who didn’t know what he was doing.
Sean had drifted around. He’d done part of a plumbing apprenticeship, which he gave up, he told me, when he realized he wasn’t
prepared to spend his life sticking his hand into other people’s
toilets. At one point he’d thought of joining the army. By the time
I met him, he’d been in Notting Hill for a couple of years, making
a living in a variety of ways—a little carpentry, a little hash dealing,
delivering furniture in Rosa, a ten-year-old combi-van he’d painted
a sickly shade of .esh-pink. In search of food, he led me through
the frosted-glass door of a café on All Saints Road. “Hello, Gloria,”
he said cheerfully, striding up to the counter and grinning at the
stout black woman behind it. I followed him gingerly, feeling as if
I’d stepped into the saloon bar scene in a Western. Men in work
clothes or suits and skinny brim hats were hunched over the
Formica tables, narrowing their eyes and kissing their teeth at us.
The hostility was almost palpable.
“You have to go eat it at home,” Gloria told us. “We very busy
tonight.”
“It’s all right, Gloria darling,” wheedled Sean. “We can just take
it upstairs.”
She shook her head. “It’s Saturday night. You go upstairs it always
upsets some people. I won’t have it, not on a Saturday.”
“But—”
“Not on a Saturday. Anyway, how I know your friend been
brought up to mind his business? You tell me that.”
Sean put on a particularly winning smile. “It’s all right. He’s not
about to cause any aggravation.” Gloria shook her head de-nitively.
We ordered and hung around, waiting for her to -nish shouting
at whoever was doing the cooking. Her customers went back to
their suppers. At the time I was confused by their resentment. I
was, as I thought of it, “on their side.” Having said that, I still
remember my shamefully instinctive recoil, my little moment of
panic at the sight of all those black faces staring at me.
Gloria started wrapping up our food, but Sean kept hassling her
to let us join in with whatever was happening upstairs. It looked
as if she was about to relent until she noticed my bare and by now
rather dirty feet. After that it was de-nitely no dice. Sean was told
never to bring such a -lthy good-for-nothing (her word) into her
establishment (also her word) again. We took our supper and left
in a hurry, me rattled, Sean laughing. A month or so later we were
-nally allowed upstairs, though not on a Saturday night, and I
caught a glimpse of another of London’s many undergrounds,
Gloria’s miniature shebeen, where in her packed living room grizzled old men bet on cards and young ones smoked reefer out of
the window, a scene of minor debauchery acted out to the terrible
Jim Reeves records she played on her old Dansette.
We took our goat curry back to Vicky’s .at. On the way, Sean
stopped o, at a house under the shadow of the half-built .yover,
rang the bell and in a brief transaction conducted through a barely
cracked front door took possession of a bottle of Wray & Nephew’s
rum and a quarter of powerful-smelling weed. After we’d eaten I
lounged around on the rug as Sean unsuccessfully mined Vicky’s
record collection for rock music. Within an hour or so we were
back on the road, several shots into our game and walking with a
swagger that, while not yet a stagger, was already showing transitional signs. Just after eleven Sean handed me a tiny barrel-shaped
tablet and some time around midnight I came up on my -rst ever
acid trip.
We were back in the .at and I was telling Sean how pathetic it
was to be grateful for gammon and boiled potatoes, when I noticed
the paint was starting to peel o, the wall behind his head. Gammon
and potatoes was what Vicky could cook—and had—three times
in the previous week. It was better than the food in prison, though
that wasn’t saying much. At that point in my life it wouldn’t have
occurred to me to make a meal for myself when there was a
woman around to do it, and I was presenting myself to Sean as
a sailor on the culinary seas of fate, doomed to wander oceans of
blandness until I came upon the “islands of curried goat,” a phrase
I found unaccountably entertaining—and odd, if I was honest,
part of a general sharpening of words and things that I’d just
begun to notice. Sean grinned, looking at me with an inscrutable
glint in his eye. The paint really was coming o,, whole patches
of it cracking and bubbling, giving the wall a scaly appearance
disturbingly suggestive of giant reptilian life. The light in the room,
and now I came to think of it everything else, my entire evening,
seemed to have been refracted through some sort of transforming prism, every object in my -eld of vision revealing itself
with startling exactness, not just visually but in itself, a sort of
ontological clarity that led me to look around and think, Yes, this
table, this rug, which I’m stroking with my -ngertips. I had a
sudden sense of the incredible connectedness of things and soon
afterward my environment transformed itself into something rich
and radically strange.
Other people’s acid stories are always dull, I know. And then I
thought, What if we’re all just grains of sand and each grain of sand
and so on and so forth. But that trip with Sean accelerated something. Afterward we were close friends, as if we’d known each
other forever. It was as if we’d skipped a bit, leaped over a whole
period of time.
My memories of the middle section of that night are fragmented. I’ve no sense of the order of things, just a series of random
snapshots. Sean dancing dreamily in the back garden, Sean as
professor of the Faculty of Better Living, explaining the future
with the aid of a diagram drawn on the bubbling white wall.
During a period in which I seemed to be naked, apart from some
of Vicky’s costume jewelry, I spent a long time looking in her
bedroom mirror. How many eyes? Was I sure? Sean brooded in
an armchair, his skin an unhealthy yellow.
The light was harsh. We began to -dget and pace. It was ridiculous to be cooped up in a basement, a little hutch carrying the
whole weight of a townhouse on its back. It was such a big rich
house, so substantial, so groaning with things that I felt it was
crushing me beneath its weight. Sean was crying and laughing in
short experimental bursts. We got ourselves up in a jumble of
weird clothes, including a cloche hat and some sort of big silk scarf
scavenged from Vicky’s wardrobe. Sean insisted on taking the
sheepskin rug with us, which was how we came to leave it on a
bench in Holland Park. Locking up took ages, because the logic
of keys was beyond comprehension, but before too long we were
on the march, the night air good in our lungs, stepping between
the streetlights, whose spooky cones of phosphorescence looked
too bright to risk trespassing into.
The business of getting over the fence into Holland Park was
confusing and messy enough for us not to want to go through it
again until we were straighter, which meant that we spent several
hours wandering through a landscape of ponds, statues, twentystory boxes of -ligreed golden light, .owerbeds and other
phenomena. It was quite cold. Sean, who seemed much better than
me at doing things, who to my admiration could exhibit sophisticated goal-oriented behavior, saw I was shivering and wrapped the
rug round me.
“Always stay in your movie,” he advised.
“I’m in my movie.”
“Don’t fall out of it.”
“Don’t worry.”
“Stay in!”
“Sure. I’m in my movie, you’re in yours. It’s our movie.”
“The same movie?”
“The same movie.”
When daylight established itself, we climbed out of the park and
walked through the deserted Sunday-morning streets to a greasy
spoon in Shepherd’s Bush. We hung around outside, waiting for
the owner to open up. Then I watched Sean put away bacon,
sausage, egg and beans, several cups of tea, and three cadged cigarettes while I stared at the swamplike mass of disturbing textures
on my plate and took tiny sips of co,ee.
“Food not the thing?” he asked, in a solicitous tone.
I shook my head.
“Can I have yours, then?”
I pushed the plate over to him. I felt like hell. Come-down had
-rmly nailed the center of things, though the corners were still
displaying a tendency to .y away. The ca, was a place of .ickering
shadows, loud noises.
“I reckon I should go to bed,” I told Sean.
“You won’t sleep,” he warned.
“All the same.”
I got up to go. He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand
and smiled at me. “OK, well, come over to mine if you get bored.”
He gave me the address.
Trudging barefoot down Holland Park Avenue I felt scoured,
wiped clean. It was as if my mental sca,olding had been swept
away. I could build again from scratch.
Then I saw the state of Vicky’s .at. There was something black
crushed into the carpet. Her clothes were everywhere, the dresses
she’d carefully hung in the wardrobe tangled up together with
shoes and—oh, God—underwear. What had we been doing with
her underwear? Where was the rug? A diagram of some kind had
been drawn on the wall in what appeared to be red lipstick. It was
a complex mess of arrows and little bubbles. I found it hard to say
what it represented. I had a dim memory of Sean explaining his
plan for a space colony. I’d have to get paint. Paint on a Sunday.
I made my way back to the park and found the rug, dew-soaked
and dirty, but otherwise undamaged. Returning elated by this initial
success I decided to have a quick lie-down and burrowed under a
heap of clothes. I didn’t sleep, as Sean had warned, just spent an
indeterminate period in a state of jerky dislocation, chasing
thought-rabbits down burrows and failing to follow the million
simultaneous skeins of logic o,ered up by my hyperactive mind.
I wished my brain would shut up and knew that soon I’d have to
start tidying, but -rst I needed to rest, so I tried to quell the pointless churn behind my eyes and kept on trying (in a minute) until
Vicky came back home.
I think she thought she’d been burgled, because when she came
into the bedroom she was carrying the hockey stick she usually kept
in the umbrella stand in the hall. Seeing me looking up at her from
beneath a pile of her evening dresses she quickly realized some kind
of party had taken place. So what the bloody hell had happened,
Christopher? There were cigarette burns on the rug, Christopher.
She’d trusted me, Christopher. She’d taken me in, Christopher. I
told her to “be cool,” which didn’t go down well. She hustled me
to the door and threw my shoes after me. I dressed on the pavement
outside the house, feeling like a human shell, a zombie whose
voodoo was wearing o,.
I didn’t know where to go, so I ended up at Sean’s place, a tall
crumbling townhouse on Lansdowne Road with a front garden
overgrown by weeds. To my surprise, the door was answered by
the Afro-haired German guy Sean had berated so -ercely the
previous night. He seemed happy enough to let me in, and I
clambered through a forest of bicycles into the sitting room, where
I fell straight to sleep on a broken-down chester-eld.
I stayed at Sean’s for several days. It was a place with a .oating
population. Charlie Collinson, the owner, spent six months of
the year in India, where he bought textiles and leather sandals,
selling them in London to -nance his next trip. At any given time
several of the other tenants would be traveling too, subletting
their rooms or inviting their friends to stay there. Sean, who lived
rent-free, was supposed to act as a sort of house manager, but
being philosophically opposed to private property, he was happy
for the place to be a crash pad for more or less anyone who didn’t
work for the authorities. It was a chaotic arrangement, made more
so by the comings and goings of various groups, sects and gangs,
mostly political, though it wasn’t unusual for a band to be rehearsing
in the basement or stage lighting to be stored in one of the
bedrooms. Some people handled the lack of routine better than
others. Matthias, who answered the door, had been there for a few
months with his girlfriend Helen, a slight, red-haired girl I’d also
seen at Free Pictures. For all their earnest talk of dismantling their
social conditioning, they were shy and rather private people. Living
there was driving them crazy.
Though chaotic, Charlie’s was never the kind of stoner household that had people and their ashtrays frozen into position on the
sofas. Life was lived in an atmosphere of frenzied communal
preparation. Something was happening in the world and, whatever
it was, we were going to be in the middle of it. It was time to get
ready. People got ready by waking up at -ve A.M. to join picket
lines, by writing lea.ets, folding lea.ets, organizing fund-raisers,
getting pushed around by the cops, folding more lea.ets, going
to court, getting up at two A.M. to write slogans on walls on
Golborne Road and talking, above all, talking. One morning I
went to sleep in someone’s bed and woke up a few hours later in
the middle of a reading group, eight people sitting on the .oor
picking through Hegel. I was just beginning to get involved in a
discussion about the master-slave dialectic when Sean put his head
round the door to ask if I wanted to go and “do the food run.”
The word food was enough. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d
gotten it together to eat.
We climbed into Rosa and parked just o, Portobello Road. Sean
seemed to know most of the stall-holders, and as we made our
way through the market, he bantered and wheedled and was told
to cut his hair a dozen times, but by the time we got to the far
end we were carrying two large boxes -lled with fruit and vegetables. There also seemed to be a butcher who had a bag of chops
that needed eating up and a Portuguese grocer who owed him a
bag of rice. It was an impressive haul. “And that’s just the leavings,”
Sean said, a note of disgust in his voice. “Think what we could do
if we got organized.”
We went back to Charlie’s and handed the food over to a couple
of women from a Cuban Solidarity group, who happened to be
chatting near the door. They headed into the kitchen and we
sprawled on the sofas in the living room, listening to the peevish
rattle of pans.
“Primitive Communism,” explained Sean, skinning up. “You
hunt, you gather. You work for the group.”
“There’s more food than we can eat. There’s only about six of
us in at the moment.”
“More will turn up. We could invite more.”
“You think they’re OK in the kitchen?”
“Sure, mate, they’re -ne.”
Some time later, about twelve people sat down to eat and Sean
and I told them about the plan we’d just formulated to run a free
shop. It would be an event, a one-day action. Systematic collection—
go early to all the markets: Billingsgate, the Borough, Covent
Garden. Box it up, then just give the stu, away outside Free
Pictures. People could hand out literature. We’d feed a few people
and make a political point: it would be an example of practical
redistribution, a condemnation of consumer society.
We stayed up late, smoking cigarettes and making a list of people
who might help out. I say we, but I knew nobody. Sean, on the
other hand, seemed to know everyone in W. By the time we
went to sleep we had dozens of names—people who worked on
legal or housing issues, members of Big Flame and the IMG, some
Spanish Black Cross anarchists who lived above our local betting
shop. He had friends who worked at Release and the BIT information service. There was someone who wrote regularly for the
underground press and a household of self-styled Diggers, who’d
declared themselves the Albion Free State. The BIT people had an
o/ce round the corner. They’d probably let us use their phone.
The next morning I woke up on the sitting-room .oor to -nd
myself staring at a pair of long, tanned, female legs, which culminated in sandaled feet with chipped black varnish on the
toenails.
“Anyone in there?”
I looked up to see the stone-throwing girl. From the .oor she
looked startlingly tall and slender, beautiful enough to make me
feel conscious of being naked inside the sleeping bag. She had high,
almost Slavic cheekbones, green eyes and straight brown hair that
fell round her face like a curtain as she stared down at me. She
wore denim shorts and a sleeveless black vest, no jewelry, no adornment at all except a black and white keffiyeh thrown round her
shoulders. “Is Sean around?” she asked abruptly.
“No idea. He was here last night.”
“I need to talk to him.”
I noticed that she was with someone. A thick-set, handsome
man with curly dark hair and a .ourishing, almost biblical beard
was leaning on the back of one of the sofas. He looked like a boxer
or a rock climber, someone used to physical endurance, an impression emphasized by a number of fresh cuts on his face.
“I don’t know where Sean is,” I told the woman. “I was asleep.”
“I suppose you think you’re living here.”
I disliked her tone. “What’s it to you?”
“I actually do live here.”
“I see. And you are?”
“God, what the fuck is your problem?” asked the man. He had
an American accent.
I noticed they’d dumped backpacks on the .oor, amid the
remains of last night’s planning session, a jumble of papers and
dinner plates used as ashtrays. I propped myself against the wall
and rubbed my eyes. “I don’t like being hassled when I’m half
asleep. That’s my problem. If you want to leave a message for Sean,
I’ll give it to him. He’s probably gone to Free Pictures. What time
is it?”
“It’s eleven,” said the woman, her tone softening slightly. “I’m
going to make tea. Is there milk?”
“Yeah, probably.”
“Do you want a cup?”
“OK. Thanks.”
“How do you take it?”
And so I ended up sitting round the kitchen table listening to
Anna Addison and Saul Kleeman talk about Paris. For three weeks
we’d been reading about the strikes, the students -ghting the police
in the Latin Quarter, but the reports were so confused and partisan
that it was impossible to make out what was happening. They’d
actually been there. Their stories were incredible. Groups of people
who’d never met each other forming chains to build barricades.
The CRS launching tear-gas grenades, then charging the protesters.
They’d met in the doorway of an apartment building, desperately
ringing doorbells, trying to get someone to let them in after the
CRS overran the rue Gay-Lussac. With the cops tramping up and
down the stairs outside, a girl had hidden twenty of them in her
place overnight. The next morning, a friendly workman had driven
them through the police cordon, hidden in his camionette. There
had been mass arrests, terrible violence. They’d seen a police squad
corner two Algerians, leaving them both for dead.
It was obvious they were lovers. As they told their tale, Saul
draped an arm over the back of Anna’s chair and played with her
hair. The cuts were souvenirs of a beating he’d taken on a demo
outside the Renault factory. He’d narrowly escaped getting arrested
and deported, which, since he’d .ed the States after drawing a low
number in the draft lottery, would have meant either prison or
Vietnam. He was going to apply to stay in Sweden, unless “something serious” happened in London, in which case he thought he
might hang around. I couldn’t tell whether he meant something
serious politically, or with Anna.
I heard the front door slam upstairs, then Sean came bounding
down into the kitchen. “Anna,” he shouted, gathering her up into
his arms and kissing her full on the mouth. I noticed she responded.
So did Saul. He didn’t look pleased.
That night, as people were sorting out where they’d sleep,
Anna asked Sean casually whether a particular room was free.
He said it was. “See you in the morning, then,” she told him,
taking Saul’s hand and leading him upstairs. Sean watched them
inscrutably, then unhooked his jacket from the back of his chair
and left the house.
So much has been written about Anna, almost all of it wrong.
She’s been reduced to the woman in the Copenhagen photo, with
her -st raised out of the embassy window. It’s impossible, I
suppose, to separate who she became from who she was in 68,
but that masked -gure is as much of a cartoon as Byronic Sean
Ward. The Copenhagen woman stands for death, death to the pig
state, death to the hostages. If I say I think Anna was motivated
by love, it sounds banal, an old hippie talking. Or an old lover,
blinded by sentiment.
We had so many questions about Paris. Why were the unions
asking their members to go back to work? Why was it all falling
apart? The next day at Free Pictures, Anna ran a question-and-answer
session for an audience of almost a hundred people, drawn from
every niche in the feral ecology of the London underground. Pure
word of mouth, as far as I could tell. Bush telegraph. Sean pointed
out a who’s who of local activists. The Black Power crowd, the neatly
dressed Leninists from the orthodox Communist Party. Anna was
an eloquent speaker. She’d arrived in time to participate in the enormous street demonstrations of early May and “both personally and
politically” the previous six weeks had “felt like a lifetime.” The situation was now very uncertain. De Gaulle had called an election. Yes,
some of the immediate revolutionary potential had dissipated.
As she spoke I peered at her. Under the bare bulb her head was
a collection of angles, futurist splinters of cheek and brow. Her voice
was made to sway a crowd. As she talked she leaned on a chair, using
its back as a lectern and sweeping the darkened room with one hand,
gathering us all up into her intensity. I thought that gesture was the
most graceful, truthful thing I’d ever seen. When she smiled, which
she did often, I wanted her so much I could have cried.
***
The area around Notting Hill was a crappy part of town in those
days, a couple of square miles of rotten ghetto housing cut through
by a half-built .yover, but it supported a ramshackle counterculture
made up of hundreds of cliques and groups and communes, little
magazines, support groups, co-ops, bands. By -nding my way to
Free Pictures I’d fallen straight into the middle of a place with its
own geography, an anti-city of bed-sitters and bookshops, rehearsal
rooms and cramped o/ces.
I’d also stumbled into the middle of an elliptical game that Sean
and Anna were playing with each other. For the rest of that summer
everything happening in the world, however big—Czechoslovakia,
Bobby Kennedy’s assassination—was, if not exactly subordinate,
then wrapped up with what was taking place between them. Like
a fool I became willingly, even eagerly entangled. Poor Saul
Kleeman was in as deep as me: we’d both fallen out of our own
movies into theirs.
Sean and Anna had been together before she went away, but
monogamy was never part of their arrangement. This was both
a personal and a political decision. Like many of us, they were
moving toward the view that the building blocks of the oppression
we all felt, the molecules that made up the vast body of the capitalist state, were psychological ones. A revolutionary transformation
of society would require a transformation of social life, a transmutation of ourselves. Everything about my own family con-rmed
this. If I was to be free, I had to be free of them. But I also had
to recognize that they were prisoners too. It wouldn’t be enough
to kill Daddy and marry Mummy. We had to kill the engine that
generated all the daddies and mummies, throw a clog into the big
machine.
In the meantime, Sean and Saul were going to compete for Anna.
I think she set it up: a lesson or an experiment. Of all of us, she
was the only one who had real experience of the world. She was
in her late twenties. At one time she’d been married to a photographer, running around in Chelsea wearing fake eyelashes and
A-line dresses. The marriage had lasted only eighteen months but
remained with her as a kind of hinterland, an intolerance of certain
things and people, an address book -lled with scribbled-out names.
“It’s OK being put on a pedestal,” she once told me, “until it’s built
so high they start to feel afraid of you. Then they hate you and
after that it’s all they really want to do, the hating.” One of the
many striking things about Anna was her indi,erence to her own
happiness and comfort, even her personal safety. I think she came
increasingly to consider herself unimportant, except as a vehicle
for the revolution. The rest of us tried to cultivate the same sel.essness, the same erasure of personal preference, but Anna could
always go further, could always get closer to absolute zero.
If Anna was self-negating, Sean was -ercely present. He wanted
Anna. He didn’t want Saul to have her. But Sean wanted a lot of
things. Did he love her? That depends, I suppose, on what one
means by love. Sean would use the word in a way that made it
seem like a kind of freedom, a moral energy he intended to project
through the world by sheer force of will. Love was freedom, so
love had to be free. It was all walls and bars and cages with Sean.
It was all breaking things open, smashing them apart.
If you believe in free love—not in the sense of promiscuity, but
in its true sense—as the release of libidinal energies from any
restraint, any check whatsoever, the barrier between desire and
action becomes terrifyingly thin and permeable. I take my desires for
reality because I believe in the reality of my desires. How many of us
could actually live like that? Is it even possible? We all tried, and
both Sean and Anna got closer than I did. I can say that about them.
At least I can say that. So yes, love. Love -ring o, in all directions.
Saul never stood a chance. If I fared better, it was only because
it was a long time before I even admitted I was in the game.
Sean’s -rst tactic in his o,ensive against the invader was blitzkrieg household disruption. The next day he rousted Anna and
Saul out of bed so he could replaster a section of bedroom wall
that, until then, he’d been perfectly happy to leave to crumble
behind the paper. In subsequent days he took up .oorboards,
moved people and furniture in and out of the house, creating a
sort of permanent domestic revolution, a constant .ux designed
to unsettle everyone as much as possible. Once he’d -lled the place
to bursting, he took the door o, the toilet and started forcing
people to share rooms, accusing anyone who argued with him of
bourgeois individualism. There was to be no privacy. Helen and
Matthias had to sleep alongside two anti-apartheid activists from
Birmingham. I spent a night wide awake on a mattress in a corner
of the largest bedroom, watching Saul and Anna fuck in the orange
glow of the streetlight outside the window. Once or twice her
eyes caught mine.
Initially, Saul was happy enough to put up with Sean’s dislike of
him, even to take a little pleasure in the chaos he was causing, as
long as he had Anna. On the surface, he and Sean were quite
friendly with each other. Then one weekend Sean held an
impromptu party that started on Friday afternoon with three
friends and a bottle of Dexedrine and ended thirty-six hours later
with half the transient population of Ladbroke Grove inside the
house. By the end of the -rst day Sean was higher than I’d ever
seen him before, a ragged ringmaster goading people on to perilous
heights of excess. Someone had rigged up a PA in the kitchen,
which played a mixture of ska and R & B and acid rock, depending
on which faction had seized control.
The -rst most of us knew about the raid was when the police
pulled the plug, shorting the electrics and plunging the place into
darkness. I was upstairs, arguing about something or other with
Matthias, when everything went black. There were sounds of panic
from the hall and someone called out, “Pigs! Pigs!” which cued
general swearing, hiding of stashes, tripping over and crashing
around. A minute or two later a flashlight was shone in my face.
I was told to leave the premises immediately and not to cause any
trouble while I was about it.
Several people were arrested, all of them black. Saul had a close
call: he was one of a dozen or so partygoers who escaped over the
back fence and were chased by police through neighboring gardens.
Earlier in the evening, Sean had been feeding him whole handfuls
of drugs. When the raid happened, Saul couldn’t understand what
was going on. The police were already in the room when he worked
out what the blue uniforms were all about. He spent the rest of
the night hiding in a .owerbed. Afterward, sleep-deprived and
paranoid, he accused Sean of engineering the bust. “You wanted
me put away, you bastard! Don’t deny it! You wanted those motherfuckers to get me.” Sean sneered at him, needling him with a
mocking cowboy mime, blowing on six-gun -ngers and adjusting
an imaginary hat.
They were squaring up to each other when Anna arrived back
from the phone booth. A friend had been charged with possession.
She’d been trying to get him a lawyer. Saul and Sean both switched
gears and started to outline competing schemes for dealing with
the situation. She seemed angry with both of them. Turning her
back on Sean, she asked me what I thought. I told her the truth—
I didn’t know. At that moment I didn’t care. I was sick of everyone
and wanted to be alone. Anna looked over at me, smiling curiously.
I felt I was being assessed. I went to the pub and sat out Sunday
evening with the old men, staring into my pint and trying to ignore
unwanted .ashes of her naked torso rocking backward and forward
under orange light.
***
In my opinion, the Free Shop was a success. About twenty people
foraged through London markets, from Billingsgate to Covent
Garden, bringing back piles of food that we laid out on a stall outside
Free Pictures. Anna wrote a lea.et explaining the action, giving
de-nitions of “waste,” “redistribution,” and “socialism.” I provided
some ideas, a few words and phrases, a little historical context
about English civil war radicals. It was the -rst time the two of us
worked together, sitting round the big wooden table at Charlie’s,
scribbling in a notebook. I asked her where she’d learned so much
political theory. “Secretarial college,” she told me tartly.
Along with our material, the Free Shop displayed handouts from
a dozen organizations, promoting everything from veganism to a
united Ireland. The shambolic usher from Free Pictures, who
gloried in the name of Uther Pendragon, changed the lettering on
the marquee to read: ;G:: 6AA E:DEA: 6AA ;G::. Customers
.ocked to the stall. Most, I saw, were young, long-haired, and
fashionably dressed. I noticed Sean staring coldly at a pair of couture
hippies as they picked fastidiously through a box of bananas. Later,
a few of us walked round the streets with baskets, o,ering food
to anyone who passed by. Most people were suspicious. “What
have you done to it?” was the most common question. Though
younger ones took the food willingly, older ones seemed to think
there was something shameful about it. One or two women poked
and sni,ed at the produce, then furtively slipped things into their
bags, hurrying o, as if they’d transacted a drug deal.
Late in the afternoon, Sean and I divided up what was left into
boxes and drove Rosa to the top end of the Grove, where we parked
and started knocking on doors near Harrow Road. We had them
slammed in our face a couple of times. A stern-faced West Indian
church lady got really angry. How dare we o,er her charity? How
dare we come round there with our -lthy clothes and nappy hair
and act like we were better than her?
We were invited in by a young Irish couple, who were living in
two rooms on the top .oor of a rotting townhouse. The place
should have been condemned. Damp was streaming down the walls.
The toilet was on the landing, and the shared bathroom all the way
downstairs. The wife, who had a persistent cough, attended to a
baby while we drank tea with the husband, trying to get him to
stop apologizing for not o,ering us a biscuit. They’d been in
London just under a year. He was making a little money from
building work, but the rent was high and at the end of the month,
there wasn’t always enough. We left promising we’d be back.
“That was the kind of place my mum had in Hammersmith,”
said Sean, as we went downstairs. “Trying to cook our tea on the
landing while everyone else was waiting their turn on the hob.”
“Is she still there, your mum?”
He ignored the question. “Round here the landlords can charge
what they fucking like. The tenants don’t complain because they’re
grateful to have anywhere at all. You should hear Gloria tell about
what it was like when she -rst came. No one would rent to her.
She won’t have a word said against Rachman, says at least he didn’t
care what color you were, long as you paid.”
“So what can we do?”
“Fuck knows. The bastards who own it all now are ten times
worse than he ever was.”
That night at Charlie’s, the Free Shop collective discussed the
action. Sean saw it as a total failure. The people who’d taken our
food could fend for themselves. They ought to fend for themselves
or, better still, join with us in helping others. Anna agreed. She
said she wasn’t interested in symbolic gestures. The point was to
channel resources to people who were in genuine need, not
subsidize middle-class parasites. It was the -rst time I’d heard either
of them so bitter. I decided they were right. It wasn’t enough. We
had to do better.
While I tried to sort out the problems of the world, I’d been
neglecting my own. I was broke and homeless. Since no one had
come to see me while I was in prison, I had to assume I couldn’t
rely on family or old friends. I went to sign on.
The very architecture of the dole o/ce was humiliating. Hard
benches, cubicles made from grubby prefabricated panels. I took
a number and sat down opposite a poster promising Good News for
Claimants. After an hour or so, I was called for an interview with
a man who seemed so beaten down by his work that it was all he
could do to lift a pen and -ll in my form. We had a desultory
conversation, then he .icked through a card index of vacancies.
To my relief he decided he didn’t have anything suitable for me at
the present time. I should monitor the boards in the o/ce on a daily
basis, because things often came up at short notice. I should also
consider working on my personal presentation, which was often a
surprisingly important factor in employers’ minds.
I looked at him, this bedraggled claims o/cer with his polyester
jacket and his hair plastered over his scalp. I thought I should at
least give him a chance. “You ever fantasize about burning this
place down?”
“I’m sorry, Mr. Carver, I’m not sure I follow you.”
“Burning it down.”
He looked up from his papers. “Is that some kind of threat?”
“No, not me. I’m talking about you. Surely you must think about
it once in a while. You know, when you’re on your own, late at
night, glass of whisky in your hand.”
“I’m not sure I like your tone. I’ve tried to be as courteous
as possible, so I don’t see why you should adopt an aggressive
attitude.”
I took that as a no.
Afterward I decided to go to see Vicky. I needed an endearing
prop, so I stole some .owers from the park. It was one of Vicky’s
volunteering days. I hung around outside the playgroup and caught
her when she went for lunch. I told her the truth, which was that
I was sorry about her .at and knew she probably didn’t want to
see me but I’d needed an address to give to the dole o/ce and, to
put it bluntly, I’d used hers. She was furious, but not as furious as
when I asked if she’d lend me some money. She wasn’t so much
molli-ed by the .owers as astounded. She stared at them for a
moment (they were blue flowers, hyacinths, I think) then got out
her purse. I told her I’d pop by every week to get my check.
Tensions between Sean and Saul got worse. Anna fanned the
.ames by spending the night after the Free Shop action with Sean,
while Saul sat up late in the kitchen, drinking despondently with
Jay Marks, an artist who was one of the long-term residents. Jay
was an openly gay man, an unusual thing for those days. He sometimes worked with a street-theater troupe, performing political
plays in tourist spots, all white-face and agit-prop slogans and
cardboard planes. He and Saul had developed an uneasy friendship,
based on banter about Saul’s discomfort with his homosexuality.
As the level in the rum bottle dropped, their sarcastic jokes gradually .agged and Saul started to slump despairingly on Jay’s
shoulder. Tentatively, Jay stroked his hair. I decided it was time to
go to bed.
Everyone was in a bad mood the next day. Helen and Matthias
were threatening to move out unless the door to the toilet was
replaced. Jay was locked in his room. Over breakfast Saul called
Anna a bitch and Anna called Saul a misogynist. Sean gave a smug
lecture on possessiveness, playing to a captive audience in the
kitchen, where we were trying to get ready for a demonstration at
South Africa House. Anna threw a co,ee mug at him, which smashed
on the wall by his head. “Don’t you ever fucking act like you own
me,” she warned. Anna’s rare displays of temper were shocking,
not just because she was normally so controlled but because they
didn’t appear to have a limit. When she was angry, it didn’t matter
where she was or who was present. Context just disappeared.
Later that day, Sean suggested we rob the supermarket. Not
shoplifting—a commando raid. Empty the place overnight, distribute
a meal to every poor household in Notting Hill. Most people wanted
to talk about apartheid, because of the demonstration (something
to do with cricket, I think), but Sean carried on, expounding his
theme as we got on the bus with our placards, carrying on as we
walked back through the park. Principle number one: if we wanted
to call ourselves revolutionaries, we had to be prepared to break
the law. This wasn’t just a gesture, or a bonding ritual. The experience of transgression was part of our formation as revolutionary
subjects. It would change us, change our relationship to power.
Principle number two: it was our food already. Deep down anyone
who argued against stealing was motivated by guilt and fear, all
the apparatus that had been installed in us by the ruling class for
the purposes of social control. The truth of the situation was the
exact opposite of the picture o,ered by the power structure. That
food was the product of ordinary working people’s labor. It
belonged to us already. They had stolen it from us.
It was directed at Saul, which worried me. A challenge. A dare.
I think I called the idea adventurist. I remember Anna attacked
me ferociously. “So that’s how it is? I had hopes of you. You say
things like ‘The truly revolutionary line on such and such is such
and such.’ But I think when it comes to actual revolution, you’ll
hate it. You’ll hate the noise. You’ll hate the people. I think you’re
a theorist.”
She’d hit on my weak spot, my secret fear. I don’t really know
if Anna convinced me or just wore me down, but a few days later
I found myself climbing into the back of Sean’s van. She and Sean
were in front. Saul was next to me, nervously chewing his beard
but determined not to back down, draft or no draft.
As would so often happen, Anna had taken on one of Sean’s
projects, meticulously planning what we were about to do and
transforming it from a piece of Errol-Flynnery into something like
a military operation. We had a second vehicle, a Luton van usually
used by Jay’s theater group. Jay had already gone ahead and was
parked across the street from the supermarket. Someone had a
friend who’d worked there stacking shelves. Around four, before
the early-morning deliveries started, there would apparently be no
one in the building. As far as he knew there wasn’t an alarm. We’d
climb the fence, force the doors to the loading bay, and drive the
Luton van right in.
I’d taken a French blue and the world was pinned down. Sharp
edges, hard clean light. I watched the others swarm over the high
fence, using a bit of carpet to cross the tangle of barbed wire
that ran along the top. Sean went -rst, carrying the bag of tools.
Saul and Anna followed him, dropping down into the darkness
of the yard.
It seemed to take them forever to cut the chain on the gates. I
sat there with Rosa’s engine running, looking in the wing mirror
to see if anyone was coming. At last the gates swung open. Jay
backed the Luton van into the yard and reversed it into the loading
bay. I followed him in and Sean closed the roller door behind us.
The next few minutes were insane. We ran round the building like
television prizewinners, pulling stu, o, shelves and slinging it into
the vans. We’d only brought two flashlights, so several people were
always stumbling around in the dark. In the freezer room I grabbed
chicken after chicken. Sean and Anna were chucking in sacks of
potatoes, jars of co,ee, whole pallets of canned vegetables. Soon
enough we were back on the road, skidding northward up Ladbroke
Grove toward Free Pictures. I was whooping and shouting, laughing
like a maniac.
Anna’s true genius showed itself in the setup at Free Pictures.
In the dank cinema, Uther, Matthias, Helen, and about ten others
were ready with tape and cardboard boxes. We formed a human
chain to get the stu, upstairs and by the time it was properly light,
people across the area were waking up to -nd several days’ of
groceries on their doorstep. In each box was a slip of paper:
After the revolution there will be enough for all.
It was a weird, apocalyptic summer. Things seemed to be
collapsing: tower blocks, foreign governments. Sean and I went to
a meeting of something called the London Irish Civil Rights Solidarity Campaign, where I heard new and ominous words: Bogside,
Orangemen, B-Specials. Hoping for Paris, we traipsed up to Hornsey,
where there was a sit-in at the art school. We found a lot of students
discussing the meaning of design, eating in the canteen under a
banner that read 7JG:6J8G68N B6@:H E6G6H>I:H D; JH 6AA. Other
things were more fun. We disrupted property auctions by making
false bids. A group of our friends dressed up in animal costumes
and broke into the private gardens in the square opposite Free
Pictures, opening them up as a playground for the local children.
Just before he left for Sweden, Saul ran a training session at a
local Vietnam Solidarity Campaign meeting. He’d been at the big
Washington demos, the ones we’d seen pictures of, with people
putting .owers in the barrels of guns and trying to levitate the
Pentagon. He showed us various physical tactics, how to make
yourself di/cult to dislodge, how to “unarrest” someone without
getting arrested yourself. He kept emphasizing the need for collective action. Nothing would work unless it was practiced by
disciplined groups of people, who were aware of each other’s
strengths and weaknesses, the level of risk they were individually
prepared to take.
One night we got caught up in a violent bust at a basement bar
o, Westbourne Grove called the Island Breeze. We’d gone there to
meet activists from a group called the African Liberation Caucus,
a fancy name for a group of young men who gave out political
lea.ets outside the tube station and faced down the local mods. The
ALC wanted to talk to us about the police. The Notting Hill force
had always had a bad reputation, but now they seemed to be running
amok. Black people were -nding it impossible to drive a car down
Ladbroke Grove after dark without getting pulled over. They were
being beaten up in custody. Everyone agreed there was a problem;
the trouble was that some of the ALC didn’t like involving whites
in the issue. There was an ugly row, some name calling; we were
about to leave when the police came charging down the stairs. No
one resisted, but they smashed up the chairs and tables anyway,
broke all the bottles behind the bar. Sean and I were held overnight,
then released without charge. Everyone else had to go to court. A
rumor went round that a white informant had told them about the
meeting. An edge of paranoia was creeping in.
Though much of our energy was directed at local issues, we
had connections to the wider political world. In the messy aftermath of Paris we went to a rally at the LSE, where student leaders
from around Europe had been invited to speak. French friends of
Anna were there. Matthias knew delegates from the German SDS.
The occasion was the foundation of something called the Revolutionary Socialist Students’ Federation. It was the -rst time I’d been
back at the LSE since March; the place felt like a relic of a past life.
The rally was a -asco. For all the rhetorical imperatives—the urgent
need to constitute an extraparliamentary opposition, the urgent need
to form red bases and commit as a bloc to all anti-Imperialist and
anti-Fascist struggles around the world—it was just another
sectarian talking shop. Crop-haired delegates from the Socialist
Labour League sprayed invective at their rivals. Some fool got up
to explain why the thoughts of Chairman Mao were essentially
revisionist in character and had to be seen as contrary to the strict
principles of Marxist-Leninism.
“So much for the new vanguard,” sco,ed Anna. We were bored
and disgusted. Eventually we started throwing things at the platform and shouting abuse at the speakers until some of the stewards
tried to remove us from the hall. Among them was my old friend
Alan. As we pushed and shoved, I jeered at him. He was dressed
in a Chinese tunic, the height of revolutionary chic. “No more
Carnaby Street shirts, Alan? Worker-peasant now, are we?” Around
us people laughed.
“What happened to you?” he snarled.
“I went to prison, remember, comrade.”
Eventually we were frogmarched toward the doors. And that
was when I met Miles Bridgeman for the second time, perched on
a chair at the back of the hall, panning an 8 mm camera across
the crowd. As we were hustled past he called out to me. Beside
him, sitting on the .oor in the aisle, was a pale young girl in a big
.oppy straw hat, smoking a cigarette and staring abstractedly at
the ceiling. He followed us on to the street with his camera and
-lmed us continuing our argument with the stewards. Various
groups had set up tables outside the hall to hawk literature and
solicit donations. Some onlookers joined in on our side and eventually Alan and the others, most of whom I knew, retreated back
indoors. The rest of us went to the pub.
I introduced Miles to the others, only to -nd some of them already
knew him. He introduced me to his friend, whose name was Ursula.
She asked me what star sign I was and seemed very put out when
Anna told her all mysticism was inherently Fascist. Miles kept -lming
us as we walked, until he irritated Sean by putting the camera in his
face, for which he almost got it knocked onto the pavement. I asked
how he’d gotten on after Grosvenor Square.
“They didn’t have anything on me,” he said. “They let me go.”
I told him he was lucky. They hadn’t had anything on me
either.
For whatever reason, the others peeled o, and I ended up
spending the rest of the day drifting around Covent Garden with
Miles and Ursula. Miles told me about his latest project, documenting the lifestyles of revolutionary youth around the world.
He was planning to go to Cuba. By early evening, we were lying
around on mattresses at the Arts Lab watching a -lm of people’s
faces as they had orgasms. Ursula told me I had a muddy aura. She
rolled joints and passed them to Miles to light.
After that Miles always seemed to be around. He’d drop into
Lansdowne Road and Free Pictures and hang about with his
camera. Not everyone was pleased to see him. Sean never liked
him, despite Miles’s sycophantic e,orts to get on his good side.
Chelsea poseur, he called him. Super-hippie.
I always felt a bit awkward about Miles, as if I was responsible
for him. He’d irritate me, then do something generous, something
that made it hard to get rid of him. I remember he always seemed
to have drugs, even when no one else was holding.
One night he took me to a party in a .at on Cromwell Road,
a high-ceilinged place decorated with big brass Buddhas and cane
furniture. It belonged to a theater director and was full of expensively dressed people drinking white wine and eating macrobiotic
snacks out of delicate Chinese bowls. I was sitting against the wall
with Ursula, whom, for reasons no longer clear to me, I’d started
sleeping with. Ursula’s conversation was mostly about her past
incarnations, which included an iron-age priestess, Charlotte
Brontë, and a peasant girl who’d died in a workhouse. She had a
rage for systems, the more complex the better. Every time I
saw her she’d half learned another chunk of tarot or the I Ching.
I put up with it because she never wore any knickers under her
beaded twenties dresses. We’d done it in a rowing-boat, on a bench
on the Embankment. “It’s about your brain blood volume,” she
was telling me. “Animals hold their necks horizontally. We’ve
evolved into an upright position, but there are real disadvantages
in that, from the consciousness point of view. Your level of
consciousness is entirely related to brain blood volume. Once your
cranium hardens, there’s no room for your brain to breathe. So
you drill a small hole. It’s the most ancient surgical procedure
known to man.”
I wasn’t really listening, occupied with watching the other guests.
They were people on whom the Age of Aquarius was sitting
uncomfortably, the men all polo-necks and half grown-out hair,
the women caught between matronly respectability and tentative
essays at hippiedom. Looming over us as we sat was a group of
academic-looking men. While two of them made loud and rather
ostentatious conversation about the Kama Sutra, the third was
staring -xedly at a point somewhere between Ursula’s legs.
I went to -nd Miles, to ask if he was ready to leave. To my
surprise I found him in the kitchen with Anna. I had no idea she’d
be there. She was dressed with deliberate sloppiness, in tennis
shoes and a pair of old paint-spattered jeans. Nevertheless she
seemed to be at home, dangling a wineglass in her -ngers and
making some conversational point to Miles, who was vigorously
shaking his head. When she saw me, she frowned. “What are you
doing here?”
“I could ask you the same thing.”
She shrugged. I thought uncomfortably about Ursula. I hadn’t
mentioned to Anna I was seeing her. Actually, we almost always
stayed at hers—the one time she’d slept over at Lansdowne Road,
I’d more or less sneaked her in and out of the house. Just then she
came into the kitchen and draped herself possessively round me.
Anna raised an eyebrow. Embarrassed, I shook Ursula o, and she
angrily .ounced into the other room, followed by Miles. I watched
him skillfully steering her toward a group of actors; she was soon
happily reading someone’s palm.
“I hope for your sake she’s a good fuck,” said Anna.
I must have blushed, because she laughed heartily, spilling a little
wine out of her glass. I tried to cover my annoyance. “How come
you’re here?” I asked. “I thought you despised the decadent pastimes
of the bourgeoisie.”
“I thought you did too.”
“I came with Miles.”
“Good for you.”
“You seem to know him.”
“He’s a friend of my ex-husband. Jeremy will probably be here
himself, unless he’s found somewhere with more fashion models.
You know, it’s odd to see Miles at Charlie’s. I never thought of
him as the slightest bit political. Not like your little friend, eh,
Chris?”
“That’s right, she’s not political.”
“So you’re just fucking her?”
“Why are you here, Anna? I thought Jeremy was supposed to
be a pig.”
“Jeremy is a pig. Look, I know people, OK? Just because you’re
the tortured introvert. Besides, I needed to be out of the house.”
She didn’t have to say anymore. Sean and Saul had been at each
other’s throats all day. The pretext was some abstruse point about
workers’ councils.
She took a drag on her cigarette. “The sooner he goes to Sweden
the better.”
“If you think that, why don’t you just tell him?”
“Because it’s nothing to do with me.”
“Oh, come on, it’s everything to do with you.”
“Not really. If it wasn’t me it would be someone else. Something
else. Something.”
Around us the alcohol level was peaking. Voices were raised.
Rhetoric .ew messily around the kitchen. A woman I recognized
from some late-night discussion program on the BBC was holding
forth to a little group by the sink. “If you mean that by honoring
my feminine side, I’m honoring the divine within myself and
elevating nonmaterial values over the consumer culture, then I’d
have to say you’re substantially correct.”
“That’s just crap, Maria.”
“But why is it crap?” The woman camped up her incomprehension. “Just tell me why.”
I never knew much about what it was like for Anna when she
was married to Jeremy Wilson. East End chancers and aristocratic
junkies; everyone up for a free ride. She was only twenty, divorced
by twenty-two. I looked at the television woman, at her careful
makeup and amber jewelry. In other circumstances, could Anna
have turned into her?
We drifted into the main room where the host was -ddling with
an expensive hi--. Ursula was dancing with a good-looking young
man.
“He’s an actor,” Anna told me. “He’s in something somewhere
and he’s a great success.”
Ursula looked sulkily over. I was obviously being punished. The
actor eyed me warily. “So,” asked Anna, “are you going to do
something about it?”
“Like what?”
“I thought you were with that girl. Look at where his hands
are.”
“I don’t care. She’s a free person. We’re all free people.”
“You mean you don’t care, or you’re afraid?”
“I’m not afraid of him.”
She laughed, and appraised me. “Yes, you are. Maybe not of him
in particular, but of this.”
“Anna. I don’t give a damn. She’s pissing me o, anyway.”
“Oh, is she? Poor you. But you’re not taking my point.”
“I don’t know what your point is.”
“I’m saying you respect it too much. This party. These people.
These sophisticated people.”
“I’ve got no respect for them at all. They’re smug. They’re bourgeois.”
“You’re lying, Chris. You want them to love you. You follow all
their rules. Politeness, acceptable behavior. My mother would adore
you.”
“What rules? And I still don’t understand what your problem is.
We’re both at this party. We’ve both chosen to come here. It’s just
a party.”
“The di,erence is that you couldn’t step outside it, if you chose.
Look at these people. Look at them, Chris. They’re blind. They’re
happy to ignore everything around them, just pleased to be having
a good time. And, as far as I’m concerned, that makes them
culpable. It makes them complicit in everything they’re ignoring.
Vietnam, the lot. It makes them pigs.”
“So what? You want to leave? I agree. Let’s get out of here.”
“Run away?”
“Christ, Anna! Run away from what?”
“Why not confront them? If they’re pigs, why not tell them to
their faces?”
“If they piss you o, so much, why don’t you?”
Without a word, Anna went over to a middle-aged man in a
velvet jacket, who was talking to the host. As she approached,
he smiled re.exively, wondering if he knew her. She leaned
forward and tightened his tie until it started to constrict his neck.
Then, as he scrabbled ine,ectually at his collar, she dashed the
wineglass out of his hand and screamed at him, “You pig! You
fucking baby-killing pig!” The music was quite loud and not
everyone could hear, but the room was instantly energized.
People stared. The man cowered, his hands up, ready to ward o,
another attack.
Anna turned to me and inclined her head. The blood was
pumping in my ears. I felt sick, as if there was a physical weight on
my chest. She was right. I was scared of those people. I valued their
good opinion. I envied their con-dence, their social position.
I took a step forward. Then another. In front of me was the
BBC woman. I batted a bowl out of her hand, spraying rice salad
over the people around her. I screamed at her, “Pig! Fucking pig!”
Anna went up to another woman, spilling wine onto her blouse.
I pushed the actor who was dancing with Ursula. For the next few
minutes we shouldered through the party performing small acts
of transgression, breaking things, screaming obscenities and feeling
people up, until the place was in a state of uproar. People shouted
at us. One man slapped Anna’s face, the macho movie hero dealing
with the hysteric.
I remember Miles’s horri-ed expression as we were pushed out
of the door.
On the street, taxis streamed past, carrying people back to the
suburbs. The host was apparently calling the police. We ran o,
toward the tube station.
When we clattered down the stairs, we found the platform was
deserted, and since she was laughing and I was on a high, I pushed
her against a pillar and put my face close to hers. I could feel her
back, slick with perspiration under her thin T-shirt. She didn’t pull
away. When I kissed her, she responded passionately, or so it seemed
to me, until I tried to slip my hand between her thighs, at which
point she pushed me o, and held me at arm’s length, smiling and
shaking her head. “Fuck o,, Chris,” she panted. “You don’t get to
drag me back to your cave. I’m not your reward, your gold star.”
Then, while I tried to digest what had just happened, she playfully
slapped my cheek and hopped onto a train, waving to me as the
carriage doors closed. I watched her take a seat and -sh a book
out of her jacket pocket as it pulled away.
Was that party the turning point, the most important moment
of my summer? Or was it when Jay came to -nd me in the pub?
I remember he’d acquired a large fedora hat from somewhere. It
made him look like a theatrical villain, o, for a touch of opium
and some white slavery, then home in time for tea.
“There’s a guy in the living room,” he whispered ominously.
“You’ve got to come and deal with him. He’s fucking awful, mate.
Harshing the vibe. Says he’s your brother.”
By the time I arrived, Brian had been there almost an hour. He’d
refused tea. He’d refused to sit down. Fear of contamination? It
was hard to say why. Maybe he thought he’d get spiked, believe he
could .y. I found him standing at attention by the living room door,
like a furious standard lamp.
“Where the hell have you been?” was his greeting. It was months
since we’d seen each other.
It wasn’t merely that I hadn’t thought about Brian for a while.
I’d blocked him out. But there he was, a presence from another
life, a scowling, sandy-haired man whose meaty back and shoulders
were hunched inside a shiny gray suit jacket, a tie knotted under
his jowl like a big .oral noose. My brother. Make the sounds with
your mouth and see if they conjure up a feeling.
“Hello, Brian.”
“Christ almighty, it’s taken me three days to track you down.”
“I see.”
“What are you doing here? This house is revolting.”
I’d already had enough. “You spent three days looking for me
just to tell me you don’t like where I live? If you can’t be friendly,
just go, OK?”
“Don’t give me any of your lip. Of course I didn’t come for
that.”
“You’re sure, Brian? You always had strong opinions about
décor.”
I heard Jay snicker behind me. Among other things, Brian lacked
a sense of humor and, like most humorless people, he was always
watching out beadily for perceived slights, the jokes he knew he
wasn’t getting.
“Don’t talk to me that way. I’m your elder brother.”
“Fuck o,, Brian. I didn’t ask you to come here.”
“Is there somewhere private we can talk?” He gestured at Jay,
who was hovering in the doorway. Matthias was in the background,
wrapped in a blanket. I think he was hoping Brian would leave so
he could go back to sleep. My brother adopted an air of high seriousness. “I don’t want to discuss family business in front of people
like that.”
“Like what?” asked Jay, mock-innocently.
“You know exactly what,” growled Brian.
“Right,” I told him. “Get out. I don’t know why you came here,
but now I want you to piss o, back to your o/ce. Haven’t you
got customers to rob or something?”
I didn’t think it was possible for his color to deepen any further.
“You’re so bloody arrogant,” he spat. “Look at yourself. Got up in
those wretched clothes, hair all over the place.”
“Don’t know if it’s a boy or a girl,” tutted Jay. Brian turned on
him. “Just helping you with your lines,” Jay o,ered.
At that point Brian almost lost control. I had to step between
them. “Don’t you dare.”
“Get that—creature out of here.”
“Jay, I’m sorry. Leave it to me. I’ll get rid of him.”
Brian put his face very close to mine. “I don’t know what Dad’s
going to say when he sees you.”
“I don’t give a damn what he says. And I don’t give a damn what
you say either. Fuck o,, Brian. Fuck o, and leave me in peace.”
“So you’re going to force me to do this in public?”
“Force you? What the hell are you on about? What are you doing
here?”
“Mum’s dead.”
Brian’s little triumph. You could see the poorly concealed
pleasure on his face. Living the scene as if it were some ghastly
Victorian genre painting. The prodigal brother chastised. The extent
of his self-righteousness rolled out in front of me like a carpet. I
was furious. The way he’d come: unasked, wreathed in sanctimony.
I bet he’d spent three days looking for me, the sick bastard. I bet
it was worth it to him.
“How?” I asked, making my voice as .at as I could.
“The hospital says she had a stroke. I thought maybe you still
cared enough to want to come to the funeral.”
I fought back my anger. I had no room, really, to think about
Mum. It was all Brian.
***
At the crematorium, no one spoke to me. My father saw my jeans
and refused to shake my hand. Of course I’d done it on purpose.
The battered leather .ying jacket with the tear in the back. The
unwashed hair. The building was neutral and discreet. A few
middle-aged people in sober clothes had come to pay their respects,
-lling the pews so that later on someone would -ll the pews for
them. There was a representative from the hospital, a couple of
neighbors. It was just another transaction to most of them,
conducted in the same detached manner as one might renew a
passport or open a savings account. Hats for most of the women.
Cigarettes smoked outside, at a discreet distance from the hearse.
None of them had really cared about her. How could I not hate
it? How could I not hate myself for being part of it?
Brian hadn’t trusted me to make it on my own. He was right:
if he hadn’t sent his friend to pick me up, I wouldn’t have gone.
The friend was called Bob or Dave or Phil. He looked just like
Brian: sideburns, drinker’s red chops. “Are you coming like that?”
he’d asked, winding down the window of his Cortina.
When he saw me Brian hissed at Bob-Dave-Phil, who blocked his
way with a raised arm. Go on, I thought. Take a swing. You want
to so much, but it wouldn’t do. Decorum. Disrespectful to Mum.
The curtain was operated by some kind of automated pulley
system. To the sound of a crackly recording of organ music, it
jerked its arthritic way along a brass rail, concealing the co/n from
view. As an attempt to shield us from the -nality of death it was
ine,ective. When it was over I tried to speak to Dad. One last
chance for us. I touched him on the shoulder.
“You did this,” he told me. He meant Mum.
His petty, vicious tone still transmits clearly to me today. I didn’t
answer, “What about you, Dad?” or any of the other things it has
since occurred to me I could have said. And because I couldn’t -nd
any words, I walked away. I suppose it goes without saying that I
never saw him again. Or Brian. After that, there was just me.
Collectivity. That’s what Saul called for in his speech to the VSC
activists. That’s what he said the British lacked. A couple of days
later he was gone, his bedroll and kit bag packed and shifted, his
argumentative bulk absent from the kitchen. But he left that point
of view behind him. No one had wanted to hear it. I listened to a
cacophony of voices, all shouting that their particular project, their
thing was a genuine example of community, throwing a lot of
jargon at Saul to prove that he was wrong and, anyway, they were
cleverer than he was. I thought he had it about right. Perhaps it
wasn’t our fault. We were in a church hall and somehow that made
everything we were doing absurd, just a bunch of people pushing
each other around, like a Scout troop. How could we even think
of making something new for ourselves when there were metalframed chairs stacked at the sides of the room and a piano under
a canvas cover in the corner? In England the power structure had
fastened its roots right down to the bedrock; every inch of land,
every object on which you rested your eyes spoke about the past,
about how many people had gone before you and how insigni-cant
their individual e,orts had proved. It was all designed to stop us
from coming together. All of it. And that meant it couldn’t be
rejected partially. If it was going to be changed, it would have to
be changed beyond all recognition.
That October, I decided I wasn’t going back to university and
would dedicate myself full time to political work. A second large
antiwar demonstration was planned. After my arrest in the spring
I wasn’t sure I wanted to attend, but my friends persuaded me that
it was important. Displaying solidarity on the streets was a way to
make our politics visible to the masses. Every day, how many
thousands of pounds of bombs? How much napalm? How
many burned children? How many villages destroyed? They said I
shouldn’t allow myself to be intimidated.
At a planning meeting there was a bad-tempered argument about
the proposed route. The organizers insisted that a repeat of the
violence in March would be counterproductive so it was moved
that we’d walk along the Embankment to Whitehall, staying well
away from Grosvenor Square and the U.S. embassy. A lot of us
weren’t happy about that. Surely the point wasn’t to lobby the
British government but to send a message to the Americans, to
show that even in a country that was supposedly their ally, the
people supported a Vietnamese victory. Wrong, said others. A riot
would dominate the news coverage at the expense of the issues.
Personally, I thought the papers would be against us whatever we
did. There were already hysterical articles running almost every
day, building up the march as a full-scale insurrection. Despite my
militancy, I was privately pessimistic. I didn’t believe that a protest,
violent or not, would change anything. British men weren’t
getting drafted, let alone -ghting for their freedom. People
seemed half asleep. My sense of futility was deepened by the
group of neatly dressed men sitting at the back of the meeting,
taking notes. They were obviously from the police or secret
service. What was the point of making plans that would be
immediately relayed to the authorities?
On the day of the march my mood oscillated wildly. The
Lansdowne Road group took a vote and decided as a bloc that if
there was a move to divert to Grosvenor Square we’d go along.
We put on heavy shoes, extra layers of clothes, padding our bodies
in case there was a -ght. Sean -lled his pockets with marbles. “For
the horses,” he said. For a while, as we walked along Fleet Street,
I felt OK. The crowd stretched away as far as the eye could see and
the chants of “U.S. out!” reverberated in the enclosed space. The
newspapers had taken their own dire warnings seriously: we passed
rows of boarded-up o/ce windows. I looked around at Anna and
Sean and the others and felt I was part of something, that perhaps
together we could make a di,erence. At Trafalgar Square, as the
stewards shepherded the march in the direction of Whitehall
(“Turn left! Turn left!”), thousands of us broke away, running
through the streets, shouting and letting o, -recrackers. At Grosvenor Square the police were waiting. As we reached it we saw an
enormous cordon in front of the embassy. Various groups had
decided to leave the main march: there were anarchists, Maoists,
nonsectarian people we knew from Notting Hill. Together we
linked arms and charged the police line, but time and again they
repelled us. Just as we’d become more disciplined, so had they. In
the end we forced them back through sheer weight of numbers.
After that, as I’d feared, it degenerated. They started using their
truncheons. They charged us with horses. It became a repeat of
the March demonstration, with one signi-cant di,erence: this time
my friends stayed with me. Everyone from Charlie’s—a group of
about twenty of us—kept as closely together as we could. We ran
together. We stood together. And we fought. We threw stones and
distress .ares and marbles. When a policeman tried to grab Anna,
we rushed in and tore her free.
Afterward, back at Lansdowne Road, bruised and crushingly
tired, we watched ourselves on television, soundtracked by a disapproving commentary. The home secretary came on to praise the
Whitehall protesters for their “self-control.” “I doubt,” he said, “if
this kind of demonstration could have taken place so peacefully
anywhere else in the world.”
“Can someone tell me what the hell the point of today was?” I
asked. No one replied.
***
After Miles came to dinner, I couldn’t sleep. I got up and made a
cup of chamomile tea, which I held as I sat awake in the study,
looking out at the lawn, the skeletal branches of the pear tree
silhouetted against the sky. On the second night it was the same.
On the third night, as I lay rigid in bed, imagining the phone call
that hadn’t come, Miranda noticed and solicitously dropped
lavender oil on my pillow, o,ering me a tincture of valerian to
drink, a sample of a new Bountessence product she was thinking
of calling “Lethe Water.”
Ever since then—four months now—when I haven’t been able
to sleep I’ve sneaked out and let myself into the shop, where I
spend the night sifting through old books and papers, only coming
home as the dawn breaks to “wake up” in bed next to Miranda. I
do that two, maybe three times a week. The other nights I drink.
There’s not too much of a smell with vodka. I keep it in a -ling
cabinet in the study. I hadn’t drunk alcohol since Thailand. It works
well enough as a sedative, but it scares me, because it reminds me
that what I’d really like to do is score. What I’d like to do is sit at
night in the study and -x up and look at the pear tree, wrapped
in total indi,erence: mine to the world, its to me.
At -rst I thought I’d -nd something in God’s books. Perhaps a
clue to what Miles wanted. It wasn’t logical. I was like the drunk
who loses his keys on the way home from the pub and looks for
them under the streetlight, because that’s where it’s easiest to see.
In the glass case where God keeps his more valuable stock is a
folio of Jeremy Wilson pictures. Complete, Modern People has
become a collector’s item, its black-and-white photographs of musicians, artists, and other taste-makers of mid-sixties London
reproduced in numerous books and magazines. God’s copy has
John Lennon missing, but is still worth a couple of hundred quid.
Looking through it one night I spotted Anna, in the background
of a shot of a famous gallerist. She was leaning against a pillar in
a white-walled studio peopled by serious-looking hipsters holding
dramatic props—an ear-trumpet, a classical bust. In her shiny plastic
raincoat and heavy makeup she was barely recognizable as the
woman I knew a few years later. Exactly ten years separated that
and the second photo, the -gure leaning out of the embassy window
in Copenhagen. She’d moved so quickly to the end of her journey.
Except it wasn’t the end. I’d seen her. I’d seen her swinging her
arms, smoking a cigarette. Little by little I identi-ed what I felt:
jealousy, a slow, viscous panic seeping out of my bones. She was
alive. She’d been alive all the time. Without my knowledge we’d
swapped places. I was the dead one, the old photograph, frozen in
time, my blacks turning brown, my whites yellowing with age. And
what about Miles? From the start he’d been deader than I could ever
be and now he was walking abroad with his rictus grin, lumbering
through the tissue-paper screen of my life with Miranda. Miles was
after Anna. Surely that was it. The Michael Frame identity was blown
and must have been blown for some time, but there was no urgency
in the way I was being approached. I was being coaxed, handled.
If I’d been important in my own right, armed police would have
been at my door: the house surrounded, four in the morning when
the body is at its lowest. After so many years, it felt strange to -nd
out I mattered so little.
Whatever Miles needed me for, it seemed to be worth taking
care over. Meanwhile he left me entirely alone. I drank in secret; I
jumped every time I heard the phone. Otherwise, strange to say,
it was a good Christmas. Sam, Miranda, and I did the things people
do, ate too much, sat in our pajamas watching It’s a Wonderful Life
on television. It was as if we had an understanding, a pact not to
shatter the sugar-glass of our holiday. Over the years, the pagan
solstice Miranda was celebrating when I -rst knew her, an awkward
personal substitute for her parents’ Judaism, had gradually been
sprinkled in style-magazine Scandinavian kitsch. In the front room
stood an enormous tree decorated with rustic straw ornaments
she’d bought in London. Every surface twinkled with tea lights.
Sam, queen of pester-power, had always craved the Christmas
advertised on television, the big family party shot in golden soft
focus, the turkey and the plastic snow. So it was amusing to see
her roll her eyes at her mother’s “commercialism.” Miranda was
confused, wrong-footed by her daughter. I could see her wondering
how Sam had changed so e,ortlessly in two short months away
from us.
“She’s growing up,” I whispered, as we picked at leftovers in the
kitchen. “That’s all.”
Miranda shook her head, annoyed. “Do you see how she’s
dressed? She’s plaited beads into her hair.”
“Listen to you.”
“I don’t mean that, Mike. It’s just she was always so conservative.”
“If she thinks we’re talking about her, she’ll be furious.”
We hugged. Guiltily I kneaded her shoulders, ran my -ngers
down the ridge of her spine. Perhaps there’s a -nite amount of
reality in the world, only so much energy .owing round in the
circuit. The more I’d thought about Anna, about Sean and
Lansdowne Road and all the rest of it, the less real Miranda had
come to seem. Despite her physical presence, her body pressed
against mine as we stood there in the kitchen, for weeks she’d
been most clearly present to me in her traces, the plume of blood
in the toilet when she had her period, the underwear puddled
on her side of the bed. I tried to suppress the urgency I felt as I
held her, the need for greater contact. I was afraid she’d pick up
on it and ask questions.
New Year’s Eve was hard. Miranda had invited friends to dinner.
Oliver and Rose ran a specialized organic farm and had a völkisch
rude health about them that I’d always found slightly sinister. As
an antidote to Rose’s braying laugh and Oliver’s fatuous opinions
about the world beyond his orchard walls, I invited God, telling
Miranda that otherwise he’d be on his own (which was true) and
would feel lonely (which I very much doubted). The others were
all settled with drinks and snacks when he shambled in, bundled
up in a thick overcoat and carrying his customary burden—twin
plastic carrier bags stu,ed with mysterious papers. Reluctantly he
let Miranda prise them from his hands and store them in the hall
closet, along with his coat, which she held as if it was potentially
infectious. Collapsing into an armchair, he accepted a whisky and
looked at me with heartfelt gratitude when I discreetly put the
bottle next to him on the side table.
Sam went o, to a house party with Kenny and some other
friends, kissing everyone good night and wishing them a happy
new year. During dinner I savored God’s table talk, intemperate
monologues featuring the local council, people who phoned up to
sell o/ce supplies, and the makers of television game shows,
against whom he nurtured a particular animus. He told us frankly
that he despised vegetarians, then without missing a beat complimented Miranda on the risotto. He used the word “cunt” in a
variety of inventive contexts. Oliver and Rose were cowed into
submissive silence, exchanging panicked glances whenever God’s
language became more than averagely degenerate. They took their
revenge over co,ee by instituting a game of charades. Miranda was
already furious with me, so saying no was not an option. As God
pretended to doze on the sofa, I found myself trying to mime the
title of some American romantic comedy I’d never heard of, while
Rose giggled behind her hand with moronic glee.
At midnight we sang a self-conscious verse of “Auld Lang Syne.”
The party broke up soon afterward; Miranda stalked o, to bed and
I drove God home. Much later I was woken by Sam, who’d had a
minor disaster, a .at battery, which meant she was stranded at her
house party. I pulled some clothes over my pajamas and drove out
to pick her up. The music was still booming, and through the door
I had a brief glimpse of celebratory carnage, bodies and ashtrays
and beer cans. She came running out to meet me, leaving some
boy on the doorstep. As we drove home, scattering rabbits on the
narrow country lanes, she told me she loved me and I told her I
loved her too and felt sick because it was yet another reminder of
what was broken and couldn’t be -xed. Sure enough, when the
phone rang the next day it was Miles. I was to meet him in London
the following week. It would be an overnight visit; I should dress
smartly. He made it sound like a job interview.
I spent the next few days craving heroin in a way I hadn’t for
many years. The weather was atrocious. Rain beat down on the
garden, leaving pools of water on the terrace. Three nights in a
row I drank and watched daylight assemble itself behind the pear
tree. New Year’s Eve had broken my truce with Miranda, and after
Sam had taken the train back to Bristol we collapsed into the
atmosphere of sullen hostility that had prevailed before she came
home. On the morning of my trip, I watched Miranda standing at
the kitchen counter eating a bowl of cereal and talking on the
phone, trapping the handset between shoulder and jaw as she
discussed packaging. If she noticed my combed hair or the jacket
I’d retrieved from the back of the closet, she didn’t comment.
“You’re not wearing a tie,” Miles pointed out, when he met me
at Victoria.
I shrugged. “I don’t think I own one.”
“You’re just saying that to annoy me. Still, you’ll have to do, I
suppose.” We got into a taxi and he gave the address of a conference center just o, Parliament Square.
“Are you going to tell me what we’re doing?” I asked.
“Patience is a virtue, Chris.”
“Oh, fuck o,.”
It was a short journey, passed in silence. Outside the conference
center Miles paid the driver and walked me through the foyer into
a room set up for a press event. It was already half full of journalists
and political sta,ers. Photographers were pacing about, talking into
cell phones. TV crews hefted cameras onto tripods. Miles steered
me toward the reserved seating in the front row. We were directly
in front of the podium, where a long table was set up in front of
a screen bearing the logo of the Home O/ce.
My nerves were on edge. I -dgeted in my seat and played with
the cu, buttons on my jacket. Just when I thought I couldn’t stand
it anymore, the buzz of conversation died down.
A lot can change in thirty years. People who sat around at
Lansdowne Road preaching revolution can start to speak the
language of choice and competition. They can come to take an
interest in e/ciency, in productivity, in getting things done. The
Right Honourable Patricia Ellis MP, Minister of State for Police
and Security, was apparently here to make an announcement about
crime -gures. The overall trend was positive, thanks in large sum
to measures she’d instituted, giving the cops greater resources and
discretion and something else, to which I didn’t pay any attention
because I was too busy looking at her, taking in all the ways she’d
changed, the lines around her eyes, the crisp suit, the sensible
middle-aged perm. What, I wondered, does Miles want with you,
Patty Ellis? And how long is it, with all your rhetoric about cracking
down and hitting targets and the challenges of the imminent new
century, since you thought about the past, about the changes in a
face you’d never expected to see again?
She scanned the room, making professional, impersonal eye
contact, modulating her voice and illustrating her various successes
with emphatic chopping hand gestures, like a martial artist
breaking roof tiles. The people alongside her, civil servants, a
ministerial junior, looked on with the requisite expressions of
bovine admiration. Miles had positioned me so I was directly in
her line of vision. Once, twice, she looked directly at me, but
there was no .icker of recognition.
***
OCCUPATION OF CHATSWORTH MANSIONS:
HOUSE THE HOMELESS!
Nowhere to live? Come to Chatsworth Mansions: 120
luxury flats built three years ago are lying empty
while thousands in this country are homeless or
live in slums.
1868: The Workhouse
1968: Local Government Hostels
Some things never change unless you force them.
Across Britain speculators are keeping buildings
empty to make vast profits. We say this is wrong.
We have occupied this building to protest at a
system which deprives some of shelter while
others wallow in money. Though it is a symbolic
gesture and we will leave after 24 hours our
anger is real.
HOUSE THE HOMELESS! HOUSE THE HOMELESS!
HOUSE THE HOMELESS!
Patty and I stood on the roof of the block and looked down at the
crowd. A couple of police cars had arrived and a man with
the pinched look of a local news photographer was perched on a
wall, trying to take our picture.
“He’ll need a longer lens,” she noted drily. “He’ll never get
anywhere with that.”
“Do you think there’s enough of a crowd?” I asked.
“Not yet.” She peered over the parapet. “I don’t see many press
people.”
I blew on my hands. It was a freezing November morning. We’d
been up there for two hours. There were about -fty of us. Hats
and gloves, Thermos .asks, red noses. We were waiting for something to happen, poking the city’s corpse a little to see if it moved.
In front of us, east London stretched away into the distance, the
gray expanse of Hackney Marshes pocked with chimneys and
skeletal Victorian gas towers. The block had been built with a .at
roof, and we’d draped a banner across the façade.
HOMELESS? COME HERE!
As I watched, another couple of cars drew up.
“Might as well drop some more lea.ets.” Patty reached into the
box, took a handful and threw them over the side, where they
.uttered down into the street. Behind us, Anna paced up and down,
her hands clasped behind her back, like a general.
Chatsworth Mansions was part of a battle with abstraction. We’d
been talking for weeks about our disillusionment with the antiwar
movement and our feeling that the only political way forward was
through practical action: building the new world, not marching for
it. The Free Food had encouraged us, but the task seemed too
di/cult. Housing was an area in which we knew we could make
a di,erence. As the warmth faded from the air, so did the atmosphere of playfulness that had cocooned our little group. London
felt tenuous, poised. I couldn’t tell what was making me so edgy—
the sense that things were about to change or the fear that they
wouldn’t. If there wasn’t a transformation, what would I do? I
brushed the idea aside. We were living through a historic upheaval,
a time of chance.
Patty and her husband, Gavin, were newly quali-ed lawyers,
volunteering at an advice center in the East End. They were a
pleasant couple, serious about their work, politically committed
in the way a lot of—what do estate agents call them?—young
professionals were back then. I liked Patty. She worked hard for her
clients. We’d met at some talk or other and soon the two of them
were coming over regularly to Lansdowne Road. They were, by
temperament, less intense than our group, more rooted in the
world as it was than the one they said they wanted to see.
Compared to us, they lived a conventional life, paying rent, going
to the o/ce. I remember them as people who knew how things
functioned. They talked about using the system for progressive
ends. In retrospect, I think their politics were entirely .uid, their
professed radicalism a product of the time and place, rather than
any deep dissatisfaction with the order of things. Anna, I remember,
never found them convincing. At the time, I thought she was just
jealous, because Patty and Gavin were devoted to each other, while
Sean had met a young Irishwoman called Claire, whom he’d moved
into Lansdowne Road and was pushing as a full member of the
collective.
I thought re.exively of Anna and Sean as a couple though,
looking back, my story about jealousy seems wildly o, the mark.
They slept together sometimes. Otherwise they didn’t behave like
a couple at all. Nevertheless it was obvious they shared some kind
of past, some experience that gave them rights over each other. I
found out Sean had helped Anna tunnel her way out of Chelsea;
if you believed his version, she’d more or less got onto the back
of his bike one day and left her husband. If anyone was jealous it
was me, acutely conscious of the electricity in Sean and Anna’s
detachment from each other.
Claire, Sean’s new chick, was a pale, rather sepulchral blonde
with long hands and an oval face that made her resemble a -gure
in an early medieval painting. It was a look she emphasized with
shawls and long, .owing dresses. Anna quickly went to war against
her, criticizing her for various social and political faults in the long
and often bruising group arguments that were becoming a regular
Lansdowne Road ritual. To my surprise, Claire didn’t buckle, but
often gave as good as she got. She cut her hair and started to wear
work clothes. Anna backed down. Anna’s own hair was now very
short, almost shaved to her scalp. I’d watched her do it, rolling
myself a joint at the kitchen table as she leaned over some sheets
of newspaper and hacked away with a pair of scissors. Now she
looked like one of the mod girls you saw down in Shepherd’s Bush,
smoking cigarettes and waiting for their boyfriends.
Everyone from Lansdowne Road was up on that roof, lying on
their stomachs and looking over the parapet. There were people
from Pat Ellis’s committee, whatever it was called, from three or
four east London communes and activist groups. Miles was there
with his camera, showing o, to one of his teenage Guineveres.
Uther, the usher from Free Pictures, was there too, waving a wand
at Hackney Marshes, trying to chant the gas towers down. It’s
amazing to think Pat Ellis could ever have been part of the same
enterprise as Uther Pendragon.
For the site of our next action we chose a boarded-up terraced
house near the overpass in Ladbroke Grove, one of a row that had
been forcibly purchased by the council when the street was cut in
two to build the road. Connections were growing. Our nameless
Lansdowne Road group was now part of a spidery network. A lot
of people seemed to be thinking as we did.
We worked on the house like maniacs. In the approach to
Christmas Eve we spent more than a week replacing rotten .oorboards, painting walls, and reconnecting the water and electricity.
I wired up lights. A plumber friend installed a bath and toilet
salvaged from a bombsite near Free Pictures. With Anna I traveled
round in Rosa, skip-raiding and picking up donated furniture. By
the time we’d -nished, the house looked great. Not luxurious, but
spick and span. A home for a homeless family.
Once we had the renovation under way, the big question was
who should live there. We wanted to do something that was practical as well as symbolic and for that we needed a family that was
indisputably in need. At the time local-government hostels were
more like barracks than homes. They were run along the lines
of Victorian poor houses and the people staying in them were
treated like morally dubious dirt. They were grim, overcrowded
and overregulated. Many only admitted women and children,
husbands having to fend for themselves. Families who complained
or “misbehaved” would be summarily evicted, at which point
social workers would often take the children into care. They were
cruel and coercive. We saw them as a tool the state used to discipline the poor.
We found a couple called the Castles, who’d been in a shelter
for a year. They had three young children, the oldest of whom was
seven. Bill Castle had been laid o, from a bed factory; he was a
sallow Brummie with a persistent cough and an air of utter defeat.
His wife, Ivy, was visibly the stronger of the two. Anna took me
to meet her in a ca, somewhere up near Wormwood Scrubs. As
she talked, her two little boys played with the salt and pepper,
opening sugar packets and tugging at her coat as she tried to
manage the baby and concentrate on what we were asking her to
do. As far as she was concerned, she told us warily, anything would
be better than where they were.
I got to know the Castles much better when the occupation
started. Early in the morning on Christmas Eve, we picked up Ivy
and the kids from the hostel, bursting through the front door past
the warden and the woman from the welfare o/ce. We were
deliberately confrontational, swarming through the building and
making lots of noise, trying to break down the oppressive air of
the place. The warden was furious, telephoning his bosses as soon
as we were inside. One or two of the sta, tried to block our way.
Nevertheless, I remember the action as a festive a,air. Jay was
dressed as Santa Claus. I gave sweets out to the kids. It was like a
kidnap in reverse. The two little Castle boys had a great time,
chattering and making pow-pow -ngers out of the window.
We calculated that if we raised enough fuss, the council would
be shamed into rehousing the Castles. Even if they didn’t, we were
determined to occupy the place at least until the new year. Since
we weren’t certain how the authorities would react, we kept the
boards on the downstairs windows and barricaded the front door.
We draped a banner across the front, Pat Ellis rang the press, and
by lunchtime we had a crowd of supporters on the street outside,
singing carols and waving banners and giving interviews to newspaper hacks while photographers snapped pictures of masked
protesters waving from the upstairs windows. We’d written a statement informing people that we’d housed a homeless family in
protest at the council’s policy of keeping usable buildings empty,
their inaction on social problems and the inhumanity of government hostels. We demanded that the Castles should either be
immediately rehoused or allowed to remain in the place we’d found
for them.
After lunch a pair of council o/cials turned up, along with a
vanload of workmen from the housing department and about
a dozen police constables, who positioned themselves on the far side
of the road and did a little shu0ing dance in the cold. The council
o/cials demanded that we let them in. We refused. They threatened us with legal consequences. We asked them whether they
were ashamed of what they did for a living. In the middle of this,
Ivy Castle leaned out of the bedroom window and gave them a
piece of her mind. It was, in the end, Ivy’s towering rage that
carried the day. She told them she’d had enough. She told them
she wasn’t going to put up with it anymore. The men from the
council couldn’t take the pressure for very long. They got back into
their van and left.
On Christmas morning we celebrated with the Castle children.
Someone had donated a tree. Ivy cried and hugged people indiscriminately. The stando, continued into the new year. While her
husband retreated into the background, smoking roll-ups and
moaning that the house was cold, Ivy found a vocation. Everyone
who stood in front of her, whether journalist, councillor, or
pompous local MP, received the same full-in-the-face torrent of
indignation. Sometimes we had to restrain her, nervous that years
of pent-up frustration were leading the stabbing cigarette too close
to an o/cial face, or tempting the right hand into an administrative
slap. I saw in 6 in the boarded-up living room. Three days later
someone pushed a rent book through the letterbox. The Castles
could stay put. We’d won.
Late that night, after a riotous victory party, Anna dragged me
into the deserted street outside the Castles’ house. We were drunk.
The overpass loomed above us. Her normal reserve had dissolved
completely, replaced with a -erce libidinal intensity. “Come on,
Chrissy-boy,” she told me. “Now’s your chance.” Pressed into a
doorway like a couple of teenagers, we mashed our faces together
and fumbled at each other’s clothes, icy -ngers digging under coats
and sweaters, our breath misting in the freezing night air.
That night we slept together on her mattress at Lansdowne Road,
in the room she’d painted white and emptied of every possession
but a battered metal trunk of clothes and books. The room was
cold and we were high and sometimes I’d brie.y hallucinate that
we were statues or corpses, an instant of lost time before I was
jolted back to the slick panting tangle of our fucking, her mouth
on my cock, my tongue lapping and sucking at her breasts, her
cunt. It was these words she wanted to say and for me to say to
her, cunt, spunk, asshole, as if to scrape the act bare, purify it of
sentiment.
It felt like a coronation, such a violent release from the frustration of wanting her. Afterward she lay in my arms and I felt,
narcissistically, that we’d sealed some kind of bargain.
Early the next morning I woke up to -nd Sean sitting at the
end of the bed, shirtless, smoking a roach he’d -shed out of last
night’s over.owing ashtray. Anna was asleep next to me, one arm
thrown over my chest. He was examining us, a curious look on
his face. In the gray half-light the blurred tattoo on his chest was
an amorphous stain, a Rorschach blot. I asked him where he’d left
Claire and he grinned humorlessly. After that something changed
between the two of us. I was no longer an observer of the game
he was playing with Anna. I’d earned full participant status. Being
Sean’s rival (the term seems archaic, with its overtones of chivalry,
and somehow coy, evasive) committed me to something. To the
group. To whatever it was we were all daring one another to do.
I’d thought of leaving once or twice, of going traveling or just
-nding somewhere else to live. Now I put those ideas from my
mind.
A month or so later, as we were planning our next action, Charlie
Collinson turned up. He was making one of his periodic visits back
home to sell the rugs and jewelry (and the charras) he’d picked up
in India. It was the -rst time I’d met the owner of the Lansdowne
Road house. With his long, matted hair, his beads and mirror-work
waistcoats, he was an alien presence in our increasingly puritanical
group. By early 6, Lands End, as we’d started to call it, had more
or less become a formal commune, with an exclusive and fairly
stable membership, a habit of collective decision making and a
grueling schedule of meetings at which personal and political issues
were debated with a sort of Möbius-strip logic that made them
indistinguishable from one another. Charlie was a lotus-eater, rich
and not particularly bright. He was unselfconscious about
his status as landlord, moving his things back into “his” room and
expecting the people staying there to make themselves scarce. He
was obviously used to having his banalities about love and peace
taken seriously and was shocked when Anna called him a “neocolonialist parasite” as he was showing o, a batch of silver necklaces
he’d bought in Ladakh. The atmosphere of round-the-clock revolutionary preparation freaked him out. He’d left behind a scene of
genteel Bohemianism, but things had moved on, fast.
Above all, Charlie wanted the printing press gone. Sean and Jay
had moved an ancient o,set machine into the sitting room, a
monstrous thing that was kept working by a mixture of improvisation and brute force; at most times of the day or night someone
was tending it, doing repairs or running o, lea.ets. Stakhanovite
slogans were painted on the wall behind it. The .oorboards were
stained with ink. Charlie wanted it out. He also wanted at least
half the residents out. He wanted the women’s group to stop using
the place for teach-ins. “It’s my own fucking house,” I overheard
him complain to someone on the phone, “and these dykes want
me to leave whenever they’re hanging about in the kitchen.”
One day, Sean called a meeting. Charlie had indicated that he
wasn’t happy. How were we going to accommodate ourselves to
his wishes? Should we move the press, ask the women to meet
somewhere else? We decided that to make any concessions would
be objectively Imperialist. The fault lay with Charlie, not us. He
was politically backward. He needed re-education. When he came
home he was told that if he wanted to participate in the household
he would be welcome to do so, but he had to commit, as we were
committed, to the project of forming a disciplined vanguard, to
being one of an exemplary group of people who could credibly go
out to the workers, raise consciousness through agitation and propaganda, and grow the movement to the point where overthrow of
the capitalist state would become feasible. He was told he fell short
in several ways. There was the whole area of individualism. There
was the implicit racism of his business activities.
“A pig?” he shouted. “You’re in my house and you’re calling me
a pig?”
“You never let anyone forget that you own the house. That’s
one of the things that makes you a pig. You think you deserve
more respect because you’re a property owner.”
“It’s my fucking house.”
“Why should that give you a greater say than any other resident?”
“It’s not—for Christ’s sake, you’re not even paying me rent. I
don’t even know most of you people.”
I have to say I never expected Charlie to call the police. He didn’t
even tell us. The -rst we knew about it was when a patrol car
pulled up outside. Sean was so livid that he punched Charlie in the
face. People were scaling the back fence. Sitting on the kitchen
.oor clutching his jaw, Charlie suddenly remembered the -ve
pounds of hash stashed in his room, sewn up in leather cushion
covers. He spent the next twenty minutes on the doorstep trying
to get them to go away again.
After that, for obvious reasons, we had to leave.
For the next couple of months the group was forcibly split up.
I drifted around, sleeping on .oors and sofas, sometimes with Anna,
but often not, which upset me more than I let on. Without even
telling me, she went to Ireland for a week with Sean. For a few
days I stayed with Pat and Gavin Ellis up in north London. I
remember Pat cooking pasta, working on papers at the kitchen
table. I stayed at Free Pictures for a while, trying to look after Uther.
Free Pictures was a good place to sulk.
In addition to being the guardian of Free Pictures, Uther was
the local shaman. Pretty much everyone had their Uther story. He
was our talisman, the guy who once painted himself red with
household gloss because he was thinking about color. As the most
visible freak in the area, he acted as a lightning rod for neighborhood feelings about hippies. He was regularly beaten up; teenagers
would follow him around, imitating his complicated, bustling walk.
He collected junk, pulling it back on a homemade trailer he’d
welded to his bicycle; when it was stolen, he roamed the locality
day and night, hairy and tragic, like a despondent wolfhound. The
police loathed him. One night, when I wasn’t there, they broke
down the cinema door and arrested him. They held him for twentyfour hours and asked him a lot of questions, then released him
without charge. Uther swore he’d been cooking and the detectives
had tipped the contents of his pan into a bag “for use as
evidence.”
After the raid, the doors to Free Pictures were left hanging open.
Kids got in and broke the place up. They smashed all the toilet
bowls, ripped most of the seats to pieces. Within days the place
had been taken over by a group of Italian junkies, who sat squabbling round a -re on the roof. Stinking rubbish silted up in the
corners and there was a scorched patch on the .oor where someone
had started a -re. Uther refused to move out, more or less living
behind the screen in the auditorium, wrapped in a blanket and
surrounded by the box -les containing his most precious possession, an enormous collection of postcards he liked to arrange in
occult sequences on the .oor. I tried to chase the junkies o,,
and I managed it for a while, but Uther was slipping into a state
of full-blown paranoia. When he was dancing on the roof of
Chatsworth Mansions, he’d already begun to hint at a vast
conspiracy, involving the Queen, the Labour Party, and the makers
of a particular brand of breakfast cereal whose packet was illustrated with a picture of a glowing child. Later he started to spot
threats in newspaper headlines and the license plates of parked
cars. His garbled explanations would go on for hours, always
arriving at the same conclusion—that he was at risk from some
elusive but diabolical force.
One afternoon a friend dropped in to tell me he’d seen Uther
being picked up by the police. At one in the afternoon, with
hundreds of people walking by, he’d decided to share with the
world the genius of William Blake by painting I=: GD69 D; :M8:HH
A:69H ID I=: E6A68: D; L>H9DB in foot-high letters on the side
of a building just o, the Harrow Road. He’d got as far as Leads.
What bothers me is that we lost track of him. He disappeared
into the system and never resurfaced. As soon as we heard of his
arrest we tried to bail him out, but before we could get a lawyer
to the police station he was sectioned and taken to a hospital out
in the north London suburbs. I hated the idea of Uther on a locked
ward, but after Mum I had such a horror of mental institutions
that it was almost a month before I steeled myself to visit him. I
found him morose and suspicious, sitting in front of the television
in the common room, watching the news through a haze of
medication. After a few minutes of awkward conversation he
accused me of being an agent of the Queen and refused to speak
anymore.
I told myself that sooner or later Uther would come back, happy
and cured. Instead they moved him to another hospital, then
another, out of London. There was so much else happening, so
many battles to -ght, that Uther was left along the way. I’d like to
imagine he got out and found a better, easier place for himself,
that even now he’s on a beach, gnarly and wrinkled, standing on
his head and spooking backpackers. All I know is, without him
things got cold. Cold and hard.
Finally our homeless commune found the Victorian sweatshop
that became Workshop Thirteen, a name that (as Anna pointed
out) was almost as bad as the “Imperial War Museum” in its combination of negative associations. Thirteen was an old light-industrial
unit in Hackney, on a back street near a forlorn patch of park, a
place that had once been a garment factory in a row of other
garment factories, crammed with Jewish tailors sewing cheap shirts
and trousers for the market stalls of the East End. By the time we
found it, it had been empty for years. The machines were long
gone and the building was just a thin skin of bricks and rotting
.oorboards, so bowed and warped with age that the whole structure appeared to twist on its axis and the .oor sloped in a sharp
diagonal from one corner to another. It was drafty in winter and
baking in summer. The upper story had been roosted by generations of pigeons; we found it caked with an acrid white carpet of
their shit.
The name started as a sort of shorthand. It had none of the
complicated meanings I’ve heard ascribed to it. The address was
Moreno Street and on the brick façade was painted some kind
of advertisement, which had faded so much over the years that
only the single word workshop was still legible. Thirteen was cheap.
As in free, once we’d broken the lock and put on our own. No
one ever turned up claiming to be the landlord; there were no
immediate neighbors. For a long time I don’t think anyone even
knew we were there. At first the place saw a rapid turnover of
people who used it as a crash pad, staying for a night or two, or
a week, or a month. All that had to stop when security became
an issue, but for a while Thirteen was a bizarre mix of encounter
session, politburo meeting and house party. We cleaned and
scrubbed upstairs and pushed mattresses together to make a large
soft area, piled with blankets and sleeping bags. If people wanted
to go to bed they just grabbed a space. You got used to falling
asleep with people fucking right next to you, or rolling onto
sleeping people as you fucked. Downstairs we built kitchen units
and a long refectory table and partitioned a bathroom with sheets
of plasterboard. We pulled desks and chairs out of skips, rigged
lights and switched the water back on, heating it in a tank we
ripped out of a house someone had been squatting in Bow. Finally
we screwed a thick reinforcing sheet of scrap iron to the door and
moved in the printing press, which had been moldering in Charlie’s
garden, making Thirteen a propaganda center as well as a living
space, a laboratory (or so we intended) for the new society.
The question of violence had started to raise its head. We wanted
change. We felt it was part of our duty to sharpen contradictions,
to make the di,erence between the rulers and the ruled glaring
and unambiguous, impossible to ignore. This meant confrontation.
At meetings or demos we adopted a deliberately aggressive attitude,
trying to provoke people and intensify whatever was going on.
Our behavior often brought us up against other activists. If they
criticized us, we were sarcastic and patronizing; we’d question
their courage, the extent of their commitment to the revolution.
We began to judge ourselves by our willingness to take risks. I
was arrested on a demonstration in Brixton after a young West
Indian died in custody. Anna and Helen were wrestled to the .oor
in a department store when they smashed up a lingerie display.
After any action, we’d meet up at Thirteen for what we’d started
to call Criticism-Self-Criticism, each of us pointing out moments
when we felt we’d failed, when we’d been too conciliatory or
someone else’s behavior had fallen short of our increasingly high
standards.
There was an anarchist bookshop in Whitechapel where we’d
sometimes go to listen to foreign speakers, anti-Franco Spaniards,
Greeks on the run from the Colonels. Half of Europe was still
Fascist and secretly our own government was collaborating with
them, sharing information with their police forces. I heard about
things that weren’t reported in the papers—bombs in airline o/ces,
assassination attempts against European leftists. In the East End
we had our own Nazi problem. I can’t remember if we were already
calling them skinheads. They were crop-haired mods out of Hoxton
or Bethnal Green, kids who beat up immigrants, put lighted rags
through their letterboxes. The police didn’t do much because many
of them were sympathetic to the attackers. I’d started to do odd
jobs to make money, casual work on building sites. I’d hear the
same thing everywhere, how the Pakis were moving in, breeding
like .ies. Historically they’d always stayed farther south, near the
Thames in an area the Spital-elds boys called Brown Town, but
now the council was redeveloping it and suddenly little knots
of dark-skinned men were standing on street corners they had
no business to stand on, corners that had always belonged to
white people.
Though much of the violence was random, some of it was
organized. There was a pub in Cheshire Street, which over the
years had become a kind of Fascist shrine, a place where Nazi
splinter groups went to form new parties or sni, Eva Braun’s
knickers or whatever it was they got up to when they weren’t
marching around saluting the Union Jack. I heard about it from
Leo Ring, the leader of a group who were living in one of the
semiderelict squares in Stepney. Leo, at twenty-four, was tall and
dark, with a head of curly black hair and a past as a member of
the Firm, a gang of Barking mods who’d once terrorized every
blues and R&B club in London. Leo’s friends had gotten into acid,
then the revolution. They talked about “street politics,” about
“keeping it low to the ground.” The idea that a cabal of Mosleyites
could hold meetings in the saloon bar of their local was an a,ront
and they wanted to do something about it.
At Workshop Thirteen I reported Leo’s plan to the others. Should
we get involved? Some of us were very much against it. A suggestion was made (by Sean, I think) to exclude the women, but was
rejected as chauvinist. We were in or out as a group. I said we
should be in. Anna agreed. Sean asked me whether I had the
stomach for it. Secretly, I wasn’t sure, but of course I said yes. The
logic of confrontation started to do its work. I cycled over to Leo’s
to give him the news.
It’s a strange thing to walk out of your front door on your way
to a -ght. There’s something disconnected about it, something
about the collision of routine with its opposite that renders the
world temporarily unreal. For some people, violence is easy, even
familiar. For a few, it’s actively pleasurable. For most of us at Thirteen it meant overcoming almost insurmountable barriers, mental
and physical. We were afraid. Everything about our backgrounds,
our conditioning, the ideals we professed in our politics screamed
at us not to go through with it. As we prepared to meet Leo, I
watched Helen throw up into the toilet. Matthias was holding her
head. “I don’t think I can,” she was saying. “I just don’t think I
can.” Helen was tiny, barely -ve feet tall. Until we’d brow-beaten
her into abandoning her position, she’d always considered herself
a paci-st. She’d been pushed around in marches, but that was all.
She was a sociology graduate, a doctor’s daughter.
Me, I had the metallic taste in my mouth that always came before
I did anything dangerous. I wasn’t like Helen. Neither was Sean.
He and I were buzzing on the drama we’d created for ourselves,
eager to be o,. I could see something in Anna’s eyes too. Not
avidity, exactly. Clarity. She spoke to Helen with exaggerated gentleness. “What are you afraid of ?” she asked. “It doesn’t matter, honey.
Getting hurt doesn’t matter. Nothing that happens to any one of
us matters, because what we’re doing is right.” I watched her, gaunt
and tender, a crash helmet on the .oor beside her, like a -gure
from a medieval altarpiece.
We had spanners, pipes, bats. We wore bandannas and hard hats.
We met up in a park near the pub. There were perhaps -fty of us:
Leo’s people, others who’d come from south or west London.
There wasn’t much talking. Just before closing time, one of Leo’s
friends stuck his head round the door to con-rm that the pub was
full and some kind of meeting was going on upstairs.
We started jogging down the narrow cobbled street toward the
pub. Someone blew a whistle. Leo had a sailor’s distress .are, which
he lit and threw through the front door. We aimed bricks and dugup cobbles at the windows. Soon orange smoke was billowing out
of the pub and choking men were staggering out to be met by a
rain of blows. Most were thoroughly disoriented. One or two
fought back. I swung the plank I was carrying, felt it connect once,
twice. It was a hit-and-run action, all over in -ve minutes. Beside
me, Anna was battering someone with an iron bar. We attacked
anyone who came out. Bodies staggering, crawling, lying still on
the ground. As arranged, when the whistle was blown a second
time we ran o, into the side streets, helping anyone who couldn’t
walk unaided.
One of Leo’s friends had been stabbed. I drove him to the
hospital, along with another boy who had a broken arm. No one
from Thirteen was seriously hurt. That night we held a party; in
an atmosphere of borderline hysteria, most of us drank ourselves
senseless while a few, like Helen, sat around in a state of mute
shock.
Two days later a car stopped beside Jay and Matthias as they
walked up Bethnal Green Road. Four men got out and beat them
so badly that both had to go to the hospital. I spent the evening
driving around in Sean’s van, looking for the people who had done
it. The next night, someone -re-bombed a Sylheti-owned shop on
Brick Lane. We responded in kind, by burning out three black cabs
at a railway-arch garage owned by Gordon Webster, self-appointed
“commissioner” of the British Patriots League. By the beginning
of July a small unreported war had started in the East End, one
that was still going on ten, even -fteen years later, long after we’d
all gone.
Leo and several of his friends started living at Thirteen. We now
had a reputation in the underground, a notoriety that was making
us nervous. People we didn’t know were starting to turn up,
expecting to stay. There were always too many strangers in the
building, people we didn’t recognize, who didn’t quite -t. One night
in a pub, a long-haired man approached me and Sean and told us
he’d heard we wanted to buy a gun. We said we didn’t know what
he was talking about and walked home, looking behind us all the
way to see if we were being followed. We were sure Thirteen was
either going to get busted or attacked by the Nazis. We decided to
shut it down, at least temporarily, and join an occupation that was
in progress a few miles away in Leyton.
Sylvan Close was an ironically named spot, a melancholy
cul-de-sac of boarded-up terraced houses on the site of a proposed
new road. When I -rst went there we broke a hole and climbed
through it to take a look around. Two rows of -ve and a couple
more at the end, windows and doorways blocked by sheets of
corrugated iron. The occupation was centered around Alex Hill, a
tall, rake-thin man with thick corrective glasses and a lugubrious
manner that concealed a sly sense of humor. He was of indeterminate age and always wore the same rather grubby black trench
coat, which made him look like an out-of-work film noir detective.
His plan for the derelict houses was nothing if not ambitious. It
involved secretly renovating the whole street, replacing rotten
.oorboards and missing windows, reconnecting plumbing and
electricity, then moving in a whole population of homeless people
from various local hostels. Eventually he assembled a committee,
including Pat and Gavin Ellis, who arranged things with military
precision. Building materials were stored in someone’s garden.
Everything from printing to fund-raising was deputized
to separate work groups. Somehow the secret was kept. The job
got done.
At Thirteen we initially dismissed Hill’s plan as impractical. We
were involved in what we euphemistically called our “communitydefense work” and were debating whether to move to Dagenham
and take jobs in the Ford factory, in order to organize the car
workers. Still, we helped the Sylvan Close lot in peripheral ways
and when, on the appointed day, the fence at the front was torn
down and it was o/cially reopened we attended their street party.
They had balloons, paper hats, cake, the whole thing. Someone
had even managed to scrape together a ramshackle brass band,
which farted its way through a few military marches until the
bandsmen were distracted by the keg of beer donated by a local
pub. It was the end of June, high summer, and the sun beat down
optimistically as the police arrived and were o/cially informed of
the situation.
I remember it as one of those days when the future didn’t seem
to require such an e,ort of will to imagine. It was right in front
of us, an autonomous terrace of houses, organizing its own
a,airs. A little community. I remember sitting with Sean and Anna
in the middle of the street, lounging on canvas deckchairs and
surveying our undiscovered country while a gang of children with
clownlike smears of orange juice round their mouths played a
rough-and-tumble game in and out of the houses. The things we
could do! Knock some walls together to make a library. Open a space
up as a crèche. We could convert one area into a communal laundry,
another into a bake house. Helen joined us and collectivized our
imaginary gardens, planting vegetables and fruit trees, planning a
compost heap, a pool, glasshouses, swings. It would be a life of
luxury. We’d have saunas and windmills, solar panels, looms.
In the real world what we got was Keith Mallory. Mallory’s -rm,
New City Investigations, had a frightening reputation in east
London. Some of Leo’s friends had been on the receiving end
of a New City eviction in Stepney, which had left one of them
with a fractured skull. Within a couple of days Mallory’s men were
banging on doors in Sylvan Close, trying to wheedle their way
inside. They shouted threats through letterboxes. They parked their
van so it blocked the end of the street. For some reason the press
wasn’t paying much attention and the papers that covered the story
were just reproducing the council’s hysterical denunciations. The
occupiers were delinquents, criminals, social deviants perversely
helping people jump the housing queue.
The occupiers got increasingly panicky about eviction. There
were several predawn false alarms. Sleep deprived, tempers started
to fray. Groups had formed around di,erent houses; some wanted
to strengthen their forti-cations in case of an eviction attempt;
others thought this would create a bad impression. As a result,
when Mallory’s men did attack, some places were much better
barricaded than others. There were more than a hundred baili,s.
Only three houses held out; by the time we heard about it, the
families occupying the others were already back in their hostels.
The occupiers were terri-ed. One by one, over the next two
days, the remaining homeless families dropped out. After that very
few of the activists were prepared to carry on. The moderate
faction, led by the Ellises, felt that without the families, it had
become meaningless. This was when the Thirteen collective
decided to move to Sylvan Close. We announced that we intended
to hold the last three houses, whatever happened. We would make
Sylvan Close the site of an open confrontation with the State.
If I say that for me the moon landing didn’t happen, I don’t
mean I believe the conspiracy theories—the studio in Burbank,
the misaligned shadows, or the unaccountably waving .ags—just
that the spasm of technocratic pride that apparently shuddered
through the television-watching world didn’t penetrate the walls
of the barricaded terraced house where I spent most of that
month. As Neil Armstrong fumbled his prescripted line, I was on
guard duty, blearily watching the street.
Mallory’s thugs left us alone for more than a week. Early one
morning I was asleep upstairs in number thirty when I heard noise
outside. I poked my head out of the window and saw men in
army-surplus tin hats smashing windows and pushing ladders up
against walls. In the middle of the street was Mallory, a stocky
man in a sheepskin coat directing operations like a general at a
siege. At the end of the road stood half a dozen policemen,
observing.
The house was barricaded downstairs with heavy wooden
beams. We’d installed a trapdoor, which allowed us to block o,
the first floor. As we watched, two baili,s started to swing a
battering ram against the front door, while two more tried to get
a ladder up to the bedroom window. We emptied buckets of water
and cans of paint over them, pushing the ladder away with sticks
and metal sca,olding poles. Angry and keyed up, they started to
scrabble around for missiles to throw at us. Milk bottles and bricks
came .ying up. The police did nothing.
I watched the baili,s force their way into the house next door.
Leo, Alex Hill, and some others were inside. Mallory’s coat got
spattered with paint and he .ew into a rage, producing a cosh
from his coat pocket and laying into a young guy called Milo, who
must have been dragged onto the street straight out of his sleeping
bag. Wearing nothing but a pair of underpants he crouched on
the ground, trying to protect his head with his arms. We shouted
at the police, pointing out what was happening. They ignored
Mallory and arrested the other people who were being pushed or
dragged out.
When our front door gave way, we scrambled upstairs and
dragged weights over the trapdoor. For a while the baili,s tried
to batter their way through, without success. Then they stopped.
We couldn’t understand why until we noticed little plumes of
smoke rising up through the gaps in the .oorboards and realized
they’d lit a -re downstairs. There were eight of us trapped up
there. They were shouting at us from the street, daring us to jump
out of the window. We had a couple of jerry-cans full of drinking
water, so we soaked rags and tied them round our faces. Pushing
open the hatch to the attic, we were lifting Sean up so he could
smash an escape hole in the roof when the police -nally intervened. I think it was because some reporters had arrived. The -re
was put out and Mallory’s thugs were forced to leave. As they got
back into their bus we sang the “Bandiera Rossa.” “Avanti, popolo!
Alla riscossa . . .”
We’d held two of the three houses. As soon as the baili,s left
we split into teams. People were sent for building materials, others
for food and water, to organize lawyers for the people who’d been
arrested.
Surrounded by the debris of battle, Anna and I smoked cigarettes
and brewed tea on a Primus stove.
“What do you think?” she asked me.
“I think it’s like the Alamo.”
July was a heavy, muggy month. As we waited to be attacked,
it was impossible to stay inside the stu,y little houses. Anna and I
made a kind of den in one of the unoccupied buildings, a roo.ess
upstairs room, which we swept and furnished with a mattress and
some rugs. It was open to the air but completely private, a secret
place where we sunbathed and smoked dope and at night, by
candlelight, acted out a series of increasingly confrontational and
fetishistic sexual encounters. Anna gave orders. Hit me. Come on
my face. I had the sense that my levers were being pulled, that I
was the subject of one of her personal experiments: an analysis
of the pathways between violence and sexual arousal in the white male.
I slapped her and she thanked me. I was disturbed to discover
how angry I was with her, with women, with the world. Disturbed
and turned on, just as she wanted. Sex for Anna was always an
assault—on comfort, on the thing in herself she was trying to
eradicate. Me, I wanted to smash myself up, to get rid of structure altogether.
One evening I was standing over her as she knelt, naked, on
the .oor, when we noticed Claire watching us from the doorway,
open-mouthed with shock. Anna’s reaction was instant. “Get out!”
she screamed. As Claire .ed, she hurriedly got dressed. For the
-rst time since I’d known her, she seemed ashamed, humiliated.
Claire lost no time in calling a meeting to spread the news of
Anna’s hypocrisy. Oh, yes, the woman who’d forced her to cut her
hair, who’d reduced her to tears by calling her a slave to patriarchy,
had been groveling on her knees to a man. Organization sex.
Capitalist perversion.
For me it was a disaster. It spelled the end not just of our
private meetings but of all intimacy between us. It was as if Anna
slammed a door shut. I’d had a glimpse of something I shouldn’t.
Now she would eradicate her deviation, without interference. I
felt confused, bereft.
The morning after Claire’s denunciation I went out to the end
of the street in search of fresh air and time to think. To my astonishment, I found Miles Bridgeman -lming the houses. “I’ve come
to join up,” he told me, indicating his camera. “I’ve brought my
truth machine.”
I was surprisingly glad to see him. Just then it would have been
good to see anyone from the world outside Sylvan Close. Miles’s
urbanity and his silly surface Chelsea cool were exactly what I
needed.
He told me he wanted to document the occupation. It was, he
said pompously, a historic confrontation. He asked a lot of questions.
Who’d been around? Who was in favor of the new hard line? I was
happy enough to chat. Besides, he’d brought a bottle of Scotch and
some blues and I’d been subsisting for days on adrenalin and watery
vegetable stew. As ever, Miles’s studiedly casual clothes, like his studiedly revolutionary attitude, betrayed a hint of .ash that made him
stand out against his surroundings. When he asked if there was
enough hot water for him to take a bath, it was my pleasure to reveal
there wasn’t even a functioning toilet.
The -rst sour note came from Sean. “Who let the spiv in?” he
asked sarcastically. I told him the spiv was with me, which calmed
him down until Miles took out his camera. Sean immediately
threatened to smash it. “We don’t want any pig reporters in here,”
he said. “No fucking observers. Are you here to take part or just
watch?”
I told Miles to ignore him. The two of us sat up late, sharing
his whisky and talking about what had happened in the months
since we’d last seen each other. He’d been in California, -lming
for the BBC. He’d picked up a lot of new jargon about Gestalts
and Rol-ng. Ursula had been sleeping with a German bass player,
but was now with a guy who worked at the zoo. The last thing I
remembered was the light streaming through the window as Miles
described an orgy he’d attended at some hot springs.
When the -ght broke out I was asleep. I had a splitting headache
and the mid-morning light was making me nauseous, so it took a
while before I could make sense of the shouting in the street. It
seemed Claire had woken up to -nd Miles going through her things.
She’d alerted some of the others and they’d thrown him out. Miles
was still talking, trying to get back into the house, but Sean and
Claire were blocking his way. Sean was throwing punches. I leaned
out of the window and Miles shouted up, pleading with me: “Chris,
it was a misunderstanding. I thought it was my bag.” He wanted
his camera, which he’d left upstairs. Eventually I threw the thing
to him and watched him jog o, down the street, casting little
nervous glances behind him.
Why did I vouch for Miles? Because I wanted to. Because I didn’t
believe there was anything sinister about him. Claire said she’d
found him looking through her address book. Though I told her
she was being paranoid, I didn’t really know what to think. I didn’t
have much time or mental space for Miles. Sylvan Close was obviously going to end badly. We were down to ten people and there
seemed to be very little support for our cause. No press, no demonstrations. We retreated into one house and spent the next
twenty-four hours working continuously, building a wall of breezeblocks downstairs, -lling buckets with sand and water, constructing
an escape route across the roofs. We decided there was no point
in everyone getting arrested. Six people should go back and reopen
Workshop Thirteen. The others should stay. Sean, Claire, Anna,
and I volunteered.
As we waited for the -nal assault, the Apollo crew landed on
the moon. Tranquility base. Up there the crew-cut astronauts could
see the whole world as a blue-green disc. Down below, we were
in our bunker. We stayed awake for forty-eight straight hours
before the attack came. A massive battalion of police blocked the
end of the street, guarding vanloads of council workmen. There
was no sign of Mallory: it was obviously going to be a completely
di,erent operation. As a small group of supporters shouted slogans
from behind a cordon, an inspector with a sergeant-major’s penetrating tone told us through a bullhorn that we had twenty minutes
to get out. We refused and they moved forward, forming a ring
that closed in through the backyards until number thirty-four was
surrounded by a triple row of uniformed o/cers. We had a huge
red and black .ag, which we waved out of the window as the
workmen swarmed into the empty houses around us with crowbars
and sledgehammers.
Within half an hour most of Sylvan Close had been rendered
uninhabitable. Floors were torn up, toilets smashed, pipes and
cables pulled out of walls. The council was evidently determined
that, whatever else happened, we weren’t going to be able to move
back in. Watching the ruin of the rest of the street was somehow
more frightening than listening to the baili,s breaking down our
barricade. They weren’t just smashing up our crude repair work
but all the things we’d imagined: the long refectory table, the
kindergarten, the workshops. When they -nally broke through
the wall we retreated to the roof. My lasting memory of that day
is the shudder of the bricks under my hands as I clung to the
chimney, watching the black slates tremble and spray upward as
the council workmen battered their way through.
***
Sylvan Close was on Miles’s mind too as Pat Ellis left the room
after her press conference. I craned my neck to watch her leave,
followed by a train of advisers and assistants. Miles studied my
perspiring face. “She did legal work for you after Leyton, didn’t
she?”
“That’s right.” I felt like a lab animal, skull shaved for the probe.
“So now you’ve performed your little experiment, you can tell me
the results.”
“What?”
“Stop baiting me and tell me what you want. What have I got
to do with Pat Ellis? I haven’t seen her since—for longer than I
haven’t seen you. You know she had nothing to do with anything.
Whatever you’re involved with, I won’t be part of it. It’s not my
business. I just want to be left alone.”
“For God’s sake, Chris. Let’s at least get out of the building.
Stop raising your voice and we’ll go and -nd something to eat.
Eat, then we’ll talk, I promise.” He gripped my elbow and steered
me outside. On the street he hailed a taxi, giving the driver the
address of a members’ club in Soho.
All four of us pleaded not guilty. Hoping to turn our trial toward
some political purpose, we disrupted the proceedings, shouted at
the baili,s and policemen who were giving evidence. Sean and I
were given short prison sentences. Claire and Anna were -ned;
I think the judge was feeling chivalrous. While I was locked up in
Brixton there were riots in Northern Ireland and British troops
were sent over to keep the peace. I heard later the soldiers were
welcomed by the Catholics, who thought they were going to
protect them against a police force sta,ed and controlled by their
Protestant neighbors. To the Thirteen collective it looked like one
thing only: the British state was beginning to make war on its own
people. Tanks on working-class streets. Soldiers taking aim behind
garden hedges. Our boys, the Fascist regime. The Prince of Wales’s
Own went in on August 6. It became a kind of shorthand
for us, August 14, proof that the logic of confrontation was being
followed by the other side too.
Miles’s club was in a Georgian townhouse. We climbed a .ight
of narrow stairs and Miles signed us in, .irting with the young
woman at the front desk. Heavily, deliberately, I wrote Michael
Frame in the register. We sat on broken-down leather armchairs
and I squirmed agitatedly around, trying to brace myself against
sinking. The room projected an artful air of shabby comfort.
Discreet waiting sta,, discreet touch screens to process your order.
It wasn’t one of those places where they make you wear a tie; if
Miles had taken me somewhere like that I’d have been less
disoriented.
“Would you like something to eat, Chris?”
“What exactly is it you do, Miles? I’ve never known what you do.”
“You wouldn’t like to see the menu?”
“Not really. I want to know who you work for.”
“Christ, Chris, you might as well get lunch out of it. I’m not
going to pretend this is all fun and games for you. I know what’s
at stake.”
“You’re a consultant. That’s what you said. A political consultant.
So who are your clients?”
“Like I said, I know what’s at stake. You’ve got a nice niche down
there in Sussex. I can understand you want to hang on to it. And
if you want this done with the minimum fuss, you need to get it
into your head that I’m not going to answer all or even most of
your questions, so you might as well calm the fuck down and order
some lunch. Everybody needs to eat. I certainly need to eat.”
He realized the waitress was hovering, nervously. “Oh, hi. Let’s
get two large gin and tonics and then I’ll have the -sh pie. Glass
of sauvignon with the pie.”
She turned to me.
“You have a vegetarian option? Fine. I’ll take that.”
The waitress left. Miles nodded gnomically. “OK,” he said. “Now
we’ve actually taken a breath, maybe we can do this in a civilized
fashion. In answer to your question, I work for myself.”
“You’re lying already.”
“I own and run a public-a,airs consultancy, which has a number
of clients, some of whom you no doubt disapprove of. I’ve worked
for multinationals. I’ve worked for various special interest groups.
Trade associations, that kind of thing. I help them get what they
want from the political system. In the seventies I spent some time
working in the media. You remember I was interested in -lmmaking?”
“I remember that.”
“I ended up in television for a while. Current a,airs.”
“You were a journalist?”
“Brie.y. Mostly management. I had contacts. I got to know how
things work.”
“And now?”
“Now I want to know what you thought of Patricia Ellis.”
“She’s doing very well.” I shrugged. “She seemed to have a lot
of .unkeys.”
“She used to be a real -rebrand, remember?”
“Did she?”
“Oh, come on. What about during all that Leyton business?
Quoting Mao in meetings. Talking about expropriating this and
smashing that.”
“I don’t remember you being at any meetings, Miles. I remember
you turning up one day out of the blue and asking a lot of questions. I remember you getting thrown out. I remember Sean Ward
punching you. Do you remember all that?”
“It was a misunderstanding.”
“Of course. And is this a misunderstanding too?”
“This is lunch, Chris.”
“At least call me Mike.”
The waitress came with our drinks. Without thinking, I gulped
my gin and tonic. Miles looked at me, his lopsided smile creeping
across his face. “Well that seemed to go down easily. I knew your
whole teetotal Buddhist thing was a con.”
I felt I’d tripped up. “It’s not a con. At least it wasn’t, not at the
time. I don’t consider myself a Buddhist now, but I was. I’d be dead
otherwise.”
“What happened to you?”
“When?”
“After you left.”
“I couldn’t deal with—anything. What had happened, anything.
I drifted around in Asia, did too many drugs. It got very bad.
Someone scraped me o, the street in Bangkok and took me to a
monastery. The monks used to treat addicts.”
“And they cured you.”
“That’s right.”
“They cured you and along the way they made you into a
believer. So God got you in the end!” He did a little trumpet call,
trilling his -ngers in front of his face. “After all that!”
“Buddhists don’t believe in God.”
“But a believer, nonetheless.”
I had no comeback to that. First the revolution, then the Four
Noble Truths. A compulsive believer, always mistaking my ideas
for the world. “Wisdom is not scholarship,” said the monks. How
I’d studied that saying!
The waitress returned with our food. I watched Miles fork -sh
pie into his mouth. It was frightening to hear my life tossed about
in trite phrases, a joke to be capped with a punchline. It made me
feel temporary, disposable.
His long jaw, masticating and grinding.
At Wat Tham Nok we stayed in huts, a wretched, emaciated
crew, our jaundiced skins crossed with track marks and blackened
by tattoos. We pottered about in our red pajamas, Thais and birdshit foreigners together, looking at the .oor, racked by withdrawal.
The village of the damned. “Drink, drink.” Every morning, kneeling
before a bucket, we downed a beaker of the mixture and waited
for the spasms to come. The acid reek of my vomit. The sounds
of the men beside me, groaning and cursing. “Drink, drink.” The
monks paced up and down behind us like drill instructors.
The whole bucket of water was to be ingested, then spewed
into the trough. Hard men, the monks. In their quarters they had
pictures of accident victims, syphilitics, horribly mutilated corpses.
Aids to contemplation.
“You know,” Miles was saying, “I’ve thought about you quite a
lot over the years. I always felt you got caught up in something
you had no control over. You didn’t seem like the others. You didn’t
seem like an extremist.”
I had to smile at that. Miles was still the same, untroubled by
doubt or hope and incapable of understanding it in others. He
could live in the world as it is, which (depending on your point
of view) is either pragmatism, coarseness, or a particular kind of
heroism. Whatever it is, I’ve never been able to do it. The world
has always seemed unbearable to me.
He called over the waitress to ask for a second glass of wine.
“Sentiment aside,” he said abruptly, “you’ve made a mess of your life.
You had brains and a certain amount of talent, unlike—let’s just take
an example at random—the Minister for Police and Security, who’s
generally considered around Westminster to be a dull biddy whose
main talent is for worming her way up the greasy pole.”
“I don’t really follow politics, these days.”
“Is that so? You must admit it’s strange. To think about what
she once believed and the job she does now.”
“She’s not the only one to have changed, is she?”
“We’ve all changed, but she’s the one in charge of a major Home
O/ce portfolio. And when her boss is forced to drink hemlock,
which can surely be no more than a few months away, she’s oddson favorite to become Home Secretary. I mean, for Christ’s sake,
be as zen as you like, but you have to see that’s some career trajectory. She was a self-proclaimed revolutionary. She was plotting the
violent overthrow of the State.”
“No, she wasn’t. She was a voguish liberal who went with the
.ow. She was following fashion.”
“I’m sorry to say not everyone shares your sanguine view.”
“Meaning?”
“Meaning there’s a public-interest question.”
“Speak English, Miles.”
“It’s the Home O/ce, not Culture, Media, and Sport. There’s a
feeling that someone with her background isn’t suitable for the job.
A former revolutionary in charge of the security services? That’s
a little too much baggage, don’t you think? She’s not a safe pair of
hands.”
“So she’s not a safe pair of hands. What of it?”
“It’s a widely shared opinion.”
“She must have been security-vetted. Isn’t that what you do?”
“Oh, absolutely, but vetting committees can make mistakes. They
found no connection between her and the fourteenth of August
actions, for example. Completely in the clear. But there were
dissenting voices. Some people don’t think the checks were thorough enough.”
“I’m telling you, she had nothing to do with fourteenth
August.”
“Let’s take it by stages. When did you last meet her? You saw
her after you got out of prison, didn’t you?”
“Yes, I think so.”
“Did she come to your squat?”
“I suppose she must have done. I have a picture of her at the
women’s group, but that might have been earlier on.”
They picked me up outside the prison. Leo, Anna, and Claire. I
was expecting Sean’s old van. Instead they were driving a big blue
Rover, an expensive car.
Anna kissed me on the mouth. “We got rid of Rosa,” she
explained.
It was about time. Back in Notting Hill the van’s loud exhaust
and distinctive pink paint job had become a liability. By the time
we moved out of Charlie’s we were spending half our time by the
side of the road, watching sour-faced constables kick her tires and
poke around under the seats. Eventually we’d taken her to a friend’s
garage in Shepherd’s Bush and had her sprayed white, but it was
a sloppy job. You could always see a faint pink sheen on the hood
and the back doors.
“Where did you get this from?” I asked, running my hands over
the car’s creamy upholstery.
“Somewhere in Belgravia,” said Anna.
“I thought Sean was still in prison.”
“He is.”
“Anna and Claire took it,” muttered Leo.
“Leo says it’s too .ashy, but really he hates it because stealing
cars is man’s work.”
“You should bloody get rid of it.”
“Oh, calm down.”
We parked the car in the yard behind Workshop Thirteen and
covered it with a tarpaulin. I found the place full of people I barely
knew. Two or three agit-prop friends of Jay’s were lounging around,
bumming cigarettes and waiting for someone to cook. A young
black woman was running o, lea.ets on the printing press.
In the Brixton prison rec room there had been a television. The
news pictures seemed to tell a simple, chilling story. Glass on
the streets of the Bogside. Blazing cars. “We have to -ght back,” I
told Leo that night. It was late and we were whispering. Everyone
around us on the mattresses was asleep, bundled in blankets and
sleeping bags. Nearby Anna spooned closer to Shirley, the young
black woman. I was expecting to be with Anna on my -rst night
of freedom. Either her or Claire. I was angry. Leo was too, though
for di,erent reasons.
“They’re ganging up on me,” he hissed, “calling me a misogynist.
Anna said I was unable to distinguish rape from ordinary sexual
relations. Fucking bitch.”
There was always a lot of tension at Thirteen. I think that was
partly because so many things weren’t said. I wanted to talk
privately, not least with Anna, but it was impossible. With Sean
still away in prison, Anna had exerted control over the collective.
She’d become the advocate of a policy of absolute openness. The
individual was a politically suspect category; privacy was just
another name for isolation; the atomized worker was subject to
feelings of depression and alienation that could only be cured by
participation in an authentically communal experience. It was as
if she subsumed herself entirely into Thirteen. Everything she did,
whether it was washing herself or going to the toilet, she did in
the presence, at least potentially, of someone else. And somehow
she succeeded in placing herself entirely on the surface. Her nakedness became meaningless, even to me. It was as if she had no inner
life at all. But that totalitarian sharing became the rule for every
one of us that winter, not just Anna, and in most of us it bred
furtiveness. It was easier not to speak about your feelings to anyone
than be forced to o,er them up to everyone, yet another sacri-ce
on the bon-re of openness.
Soon after I got out of prison, there was an argument among the
women involving Leo’s traditionally minded girlfriend Cynthia, who
rolled his joints, did his laundry, and looked at him with big eyes
when he spoke at our meetings. Cynthia was told she was politically
backward. She was informed that she was no longer welcome. Leo
was furious at her expulsion and moved out with her to stay in a
huge unruly commune that had been set up in an empty mansion
in Piccadilly. When I went to visit I found more than a hundred
people crashing in high-ceilinged reception rooms, climbing on the
roof and shouting down from the windows at a besieging crowd of
police and hostile gawpers. You had to get in and out using a makeshift drawbridge. After a couple of weeks, the place was stormed.
Leo came back. Cynthia didn’t. Was Pat Ellis there when they expelled
Cynthia? I think she was. I remember her face, twisted, shouting. I
was upstairs, dozing on the mattresses. I went down to watch. Pat
was listing Cynthia’s faults. Other women were joining in. Cynthia
was whimpering. “You just aren’t human, you people. What’s so
bloody revolutionary about being cruel?”
That would have been just after we burned down the -rst army
recruitment o/ce.
The noise of chatter in Miles’s Soho club was increasing, forcing
us to raise our voices. “Are you telling me,” he said, draining his
second glass of wine, “that Pat was completely unaware of what
you were doing?”
“We weren’t exactly advertising it.”
“Not at -rst.”
“She was part of the women’s group. Most of them split o, and
set up some kind of commune in Tufnell Park.”
“She didn’t go, though.”
“She was married.”
“But she didn’t go. She wanted to be in the action faction, not
the sisterhood.”
“Where did you get that? You sound like someone’s uncle trying
to talk jive. She wasn’t part of either. The feminists thought she
was soft because she wasn’t prepared to leave her husband. We
thought she was just another bourgeoise. She was useful because
she was a lawyer, but we didn’t trust her.”
“Regardless. She must have known.”
“Known? Why? She hardly ever came to Thirteen.”
“I’m not sure you’re remembering correctly.”
How is my memory? When Leo showed me the crate of petrol
bombs it made sense. I didn’t discuss it. I didn’t really stop to
think very much at all. Milk bottles -lled with four-star and engine
oil, ballasted with sand, stoppered with wadding. We drove the
Rover down to a recruitment o/ce in Blackheath where the two
of us broke a window and threw a couple of our crude devices
through the hole. As we drove away all I could think about was
Kavanagh the junk man, me and Brian setting -re to his garage
as kids.
When Anna found out, she was furious. We hadn’t consulted
the group, meaning we hadn’t consulted her. “How could we?” I
hissed. As we argued, Shirley was lounging nearby on the mattresses,
pretending to read Régis Debray. The place was full of people I
didn’t know and didn’t trust. That evening, we told the various
interlopers and sexual partners and hangers-on that they needed
to -nd somewhere else to sleep. We shuttered the doors and held
a closed meeting.
Q: Why have you done this?
We felt it was the only adequate response to the presence of the
army on British streets.
Q: What political purpose does this serve?
It reminds people the system isn’t invulnerable. It has a small
practical e,ect on the machinery of the military.
Q: Shouldn’t it have been a group decision?
It was spontaneous. Besides, all action seems equally meaningless
in our alienated state. Why focus on this in particular? What’s
special about it?
Q: How do you justify putting the collective at risk?
It was a provocation. We want to force you, our comrades, to
think.
Q: What are we to think about?
Your quietism.
Your continuing collaboration with Imperialism.
Q: Can you promise you won’t take such unilateral action again?
No. Why should we promise? Why would you want to extract
such a promise? Is that you setting a limit, or the voice of some
power that has a hold over you?
Q: Your gesture is infantile. The revolution will be led by the working
class. A terrorist is just a liberal with a bomb, arrogantly presuming to
lead the way.
Rubbish. You’re covering up your cowardice with quotations.
Change is imminent. It’s happening around the world. The slightest
pressure will tip the balance in our favor.
One spark, a thousand -res burning.
We were so impatient. We wanted the time to be now. Of the
core group, only Matthias and Helen remained seriously troubled
by what we’d done. We were supposed to be protesting against
war. Surely a peaceful gesture would have been better? I accused
them of fetishizing nonviolence, telling them they’d just internalized the state’s distinction between legitimate protest and
criminality. Leo and I were censured for our individualism, but
the logic of confrontation did its work. By the end of the meeting,
everyone was in agreement. We would go further.
That night I slid into bed beside Anna and asked her why she
was ignoring me. I told her she was beautiful, and she asked how
I’d feel if someone threw acid on her face. Then I pushed too
hard and said I loved her, which made her pull my hair and hiss
at me, tears of rage and frustration in her eyes. How could I be
such a pig-thick bourgeois? Why didn’t I get it? Unless we were
prepared to do something, we were just another part of it, more
dead weight on the shoulders of the world’s poor. Our precious
individuality was oppressive precisely because we found ourselves
so special. To give ourselves pleasure, we’d countenance all sorts
of horror, as long as it happened far away. So why didn’t I get
it? Why didn’t I get that my stupid narcissistic idea of love made
her sick?
The night after that, we drove to Chelmsford, then Colchester,
setting -re to a recruitment o/ce and a Territorial Army storage
depot. At each site we scattered lea.ets.
FOR QUEEN AND COUNTRY
Great prospects! See the world!
What will YOU be doing in Northern Ireland?
They tell you it’s for your country. They’re
lying. You’ll be breaking down working-class
doors, trampling on people like yourself and your
family. They want you to kill and die for their
profits. We’re fighting back against their power.
Rise up! Remember August 14!
We made it back to London as dawn broke, still wired on the
amphetamines we’d taken to get through the night. The Rover
stank of petrol. Its upholstery was smeared and grubby. We drove
it on to some wasteground near Hackney Wick and burned it out.
Anna insisted we should steal another car immediately, but we
couldn’t get into any of the vehicles parked on nearby streets and
ended up trudging several miles home through freezing fog.
For several days we looked through the newspapers, expecting
to see our actions reported. There was nothing. We read that BBC
had just started broadcasting in color; an actor from Coronation
Street had gotten married. No real news, just distraction. A couple
of days later we stole another car and drove to Chelmsford to check
our work. There it was: a blackened building like a missing tooth
in a jaw of shuttered shopfronts.
New Year came and went. A new decade. Thirteen was so cold
that milk froze in bottles on the windowsill and a -lm of ice coated
the inside of the bathroom window. A dozen of us slept close
together on the mattresses, a rat-king in a midden of sleeping bags.
None of us was working. We had problems with dole claims, -nes,
probation, unpaid debts. I wanted a life free of money, but it seemed
to be plucking at me, its tendrils curling round my ankles as I
shivered in my sleep. I developed a rash, which left clusters of tiny
lesions round my mouth and between my thighs. It was several
weeks before we realized that we were all su,ering from it,
scratching at our armpits, our pubic hair, infecting and reinfecting
one another. We burned the bedding and got more.
We went out looking for work, pooling whatever money we
could get. I labored on building sites. Leo and I stole tools and
used them to open up empty houses, leaving a trail of .apping
doors around the East End. We joked about setting up a squatters’
estate agency. In the face of hostility from the other women, Anna
got a job in Soho, -rst as a cocktail waitress, then as a stripper. I
think the work was important to her, part of her project. Once,
or at least once that I know about, she accepted money for sex
from a man she met at the club. She told me she did it to see what
it was like to become a commodity. Self-denial would be the wrong
term for what she was doing. It wasn’t some kind of religious
bargain: Anna certainly didn’t believe in a reward in the hereafter.
She was mounting yet another assault on her own sense of privilege
and entitlement, on what she considered the “excessive value” she’d
been brought up to place on her life.
Sometimes I went to pick her up from the club, hanging around
on the pavement outside because the doorman wouldn’t let me in.
She’d come and -nd me and we’d go to drink frothy co,ee at an
Italian place on Old Compton Street. I’d surreptitiously examine
her for signs of change, beyond the unfamiliar traces of makeup
round her eyes and mouth. We’d talk a little, laugh about inconsequential things. It felt good, a moment of relief from the struggle.
I knew she enjoyed it too, so I was shocked when she denounced
our meetings in Criticism-Self-Criticism, accusing me of deviation,
of clinging to the luxury of bourgeois leisure.
Someone brought a plastic bag of mushrooms back from Wales.
We tripped and argued and shivered under the covers and scraped
the huge pan of vegetable stew, endless vegetable stew made with
whatever we could buy or scavenge, tasteless however much curry
powder we added to the mix. We wrote position papers and
smashed monogamy and once in a while we burned something
down. Then Sean was released from prison and our hibernation
came to an end.
***
As I watched Miles eat -sh pie, it occurred to me that we were
sitting more or less across the road from the co,ee bar where I
used to meet Anna. When I went to use the bathroom I looked
out of the window. The café had gone, turned into a Thai restaurant. The club was gradually -lling up, the sofas now tenanted by
well-dressed after-work drinkers. In the bathroom I splashed water
on my face and tried to work out where Miles was leading. I
expected him to make a proposition, a demand of some kind, but
when I got back to the table he’d called for the bill.
“I think that’s enough for now,” he told me. “I have things to
do. I’ll drop you at your hotel.”
“So that’s it? You’ve -nally got it into your head that Pat Ellis
wasn’t involved?”
“Whatever, Chris. We’ll talk about it tomorrow. There’s somewhere I need to be, but I’ll come in the cab with you. I’ll pick you
up at eight tomorrow morning.”
We drove to a dingy townhouse in Fitzrovia, with a card in the
window saying No Vacancies.
Miles left me in the care of an elderly landlady with a .oral
housecoat and no small talk. Both she and her nameless establishment seemed like survivals from an earlier era, before newfangled
notions of comfort or hospitality took hold in the British hotel
trade. The lobby smelled of cigarettes and carpet cleaner. The
lea.ets in the rack by the reception desk advertised shows and
exhibitions that had long since closed. There was no sign of any
other sta, or guests. The woman gave me a key on a heavy brass
chain and walked me arthritically upstairs to a room decorated
with hunting prints and the kind of geometric-patterned wallpaper
last current thirty years previously.
“What time’s breakfast?” I asked.
“I understand you’ll be taking it out. Mr. Carter’s company
speci-ed when they made the booking.”
“Mr. Carter?”
“The gentleman you were just with.”
“His name’s Bridgeman.”
“I wouldn’t know about that. Will you be going out at all?”
“Yes,” I said.
“Front door’s locked after ten.”
Grudgingly she accepted that the night porter would let me in
if I was late, then quit the room, shutting the door smartly behind
her. Contemplating the hospital corners on the bedsheets, the small
cake of soap and the paper-wrapped toothbrush mug on the basin,
I was -lled with foreboding. All British state institutions, whatever
their purpose, share an atmosphere. When I was growing up they
used to share a smell too, an alkaline reek that united school and
hospital and prison and dole o/ce, and always triggered in me a
kind of cellular-level panic, a -ght-or-.ight re.ex. The smell has
gone, abolished along with so many of the visible signs of power
(in dark moments I think it’s all my generation achieved, killing
that smell), but even without it the atmosphere remains and that
room had it: old and cold and abstractedly cruel.
I grabbed my coat and half-ran down the stairs, ignoring the
landlady’s barked inquiry about the key. The evening had turned
cold and the few people on the street were hurrying along, hunched
into coats and scarves. I headed for the tube station. At that moment
my plan, in so far as I had one, was to get on a train, any train. I
had a cash card. I could withdraw some money, go somewhere,
start again. How far would I get on two hundred quid? Little by
little, I slowed my pace. I knew I was panicking, not thinking clearly.
On impulse I turned a corner. Up ahead I saw the lights of Oxford
Street. Basics, Chris, I told myself. Remember the basics. Miles will
have you followed.
The wind whipped at my face. I lingered outside a cinema on
the Tottenham Court Road, using the glass window to watch the
street behind me. Then I made my way into Soho, loitering in
alleyways, ducking in and out of video stores and bookshops, trying
to spot my tail. In a basement, as I pretended to browse bondage
magazines alongside a row of suburban commuters, I -nally picked
him out, a young guy in jeans and a hooded sweatshirt who looked
out of place among the briefcases and thinning hair. I led him toward
Regent Street and lost him in a department store, shouldering my
way back out through the late-night shoppers and jumping on a
bus outside. It was only then, as I sat on the top deck, breathless,
eye-level with the advertising hoardings of Piccadilly, that I realized
how I’d been addressing myself. Turn left, Chris. Don’t look behind
you, Chris. For years I’d trained myself to be Mike Frame. I’d settled
down in him, ceased even to think of who I’d been before, but Miles
had uprooted me with a few short conversations. In itself that didn’t
matter, except that if Mike Frame went, Miranda and Sam would
go with him.
Oh, Sam.
Once upon a time I’d been prepared. When I worked at Olla’s
new age shop I’d kept a metal cash box hidden in the storeroom,
containing money and an American passport I’d bought on the
street in Bangkok. Then Miranda and her fatherless baby had come
into my life. Mike Frame had applied for a bank account, a national
insurance number. The identity held up. After a couple of years
he renewed his British passport to go on a camping holiday in
Spain, where he ba0ed his partner with his nervousness at the
airport and his interest in relics of the Civil War. Chris Carver had
tried to escape the state, but Mike Frame eagerly embraced it. Each
database record, each countersigned form con-rmed his reality, put
.esh on his bones. Little by little, the running money got spent.
The American passport expired. Michael Frame started to seem
like an end, a -nal destination. Looking back, I think I closed my
escape routes deliberately. I didn’t have it in me to run again; which
is, I suppose, another way of saying I’d gotten old.
I stepped o, the bus near Victoria station. In a brightly lit Indian
restaurant tricked out with laminate .ooring and contract furniture,
totally unlike the .ock-wallpapered haven I’d hoped for, I ate chickpeas and drank several pints of lager. I paid the bill and stood
swaying slightly on the pavement, knowing that I was going to
have to face whatever Miles had in store for me. I went into an
o,-licence and bought a half-bottle of vodka, then hailed a cab and
went back to the hotel, where I lay on the bed and drank shots
out of the tooth-mug, embalmed in the swirling patterns and petrol
fumes of .
***
Sean raced out of prison like a greyhound chasing a hare. Before
we’d even got him back to Thirteen he was making war plans. The
Tupamaros had shown the way in Uruguay. Urban guerrilla: a small
band, operating in the city, using the terrain to our advantage like
peasant revolutionaries used the mountains. Street corners and
tower blocks our Sierra Maestra. And cars. Cars featured heavily
in Sean’s plans for our future.
We were the vanguard party in embryo. We would lead the way.
We’d be exemplary and we’d be self-sustaining. So there would be
fast cars, stolen and stored in lock-ups or sold to get money. There
would be money and with the money we’d buy arms. There would,
above all, be no more waiting, no more frustrating attempts to
persuade others of the urgency for change.
It felt like spring twice over. Without Sean, Anna’s intense cold
had spread through all of us, sealing us into a sort of mute despair.
Now the ice had gone from the windows at Thirteen. At the back
of my mind there was a twinge of resentment at the way Sean
could push things forward so easily. He and Anna spent long
hours on the mattresses, plotting and whispering to each other.
In Criticism-Self-Criticism I chipped away at their exclusivity. We
were still opposed to monogamy, weren’t we? Anna accused me
of being manipulative. I had a misogynistic desire to dominate. I
was trying to force her back into my bed. I told her she was being
arrogant. My only concerns were political.
We got the explosives out of the phone book. Sean had formulated a baroque plan to stake out construction sites and mines,
then follow trucks to -nd out where they went. Without directly
contradicting him, Anna visited the local library and came back
with a list of ten demolition contractors, all within -fty miles of
London. The theft went smoothly enough. There was a company
out in Grays, along the Thames estuary, which had a yard by
the river, at the end of a desolate lane strewn with car tires. The
only guard was an old man who sat and read model-railway
magazines in a hut by the gate, his head framed in a little yellow
square of electric light. We parked on a patch of wasteground
and watched the oily black water, waiting for a cloud to obscure
the moon.
I remember the sound of my breathing, ragged and heavy and
somehow detached from my body as I carried a wooden box across
the yard toward the hole we’d cut in the fence. Light rain falling
on my face, the endlessness of the space between the warehouse
and the gap in the wire. The open steppe.
Back at Thirteen we sat around the kitchen table, staring at our
haul. It looked like bars of some kind of confectionery, each yellow
block wrapped individually in waxed paper. We had a hundred
and -fty charges of nitroglycerine gel, a spool of safety fuse and
-fty PETN detonators. I don’t think any one of us knew what to
say. There was no exultation, no sudden release of tension. We
just sat there. I don’t know about the others, but I didn’t sleep
that night. The mere presence of the stu,, hidden in a metal box
under the .oorboards, imposed a density, a pressure on the atmosphere that made it impossible.
Since none of us knew anything about explosives, our plan was
to do some tests, drop a stick down a hole somewhere and see
how big a bang it made. We told ourselves we’d proceed slowly.
We’d take care.
Richard Nixon put an end to that. On May Day we woke up to
his announcement that he was sending U.S. combat troops into
Cambodia. It was a massive escalation of the con.ict. “This is not
an invasion,” said the President, describing the movement of several
thousand troops across the border. America couldn’t be a pitiful
helpless giant while the forces of totalitarianism and anarchy were
threatening free nations everywhere. Here was the man who’d told
voters he had a “secret plan to end the war,” shu0ing his notes
and gesturing vaguely at a map on an easel as he told us why more
killing was the right thing for everyone.
We had to respond. He’d given us no choice.
In principle the device was straightforward. An electric current
initiated the detonator. The detonator initiated the gel. A kitchen
timer from Woolworths would close the circuit. The timer was
shoddy and imprecise, but as long as you didn’t set it too short, it
would do the job. I was the one who knew about electricity, so I
was the one who sat down at our long wooden table and spread
out tape and tools and wire and batteries and made a bomb. I told
the others to go out for the afternoon. As I worked, all I could
think about was what would happen if I made a mistake. I could
already feel the explosion welling up inside me, as if merely
thinking about it tapped a disintegration already latent in my body.
Only a month previously, a group of New York radicals had blown
themselves up in a Greenwich Village townhouse. Rich kids, said
the newspapers. Stupid nihilistic rich kids who got themselves
killed. Nothing was mentioned in the articles about their politics.
Stripping the plastic coating from the wire to expose the core,
twisting the ends. My hands shaking. It was, essentially, no more
complex than wiring a plug, but it seemed to take forever.
Late that night we put the bomb in a blue leather handbag (a
jumble-sale purchase of Helen’s) and left it against the front door
of an American bank near the Mansion House. It was a weekend
and the City of London was deserted. A stage set, waiting for the
play to begin.
A BOMB TO HALT THE MONEY MACHINE
Nixon invades Cambodia. More blood on his hands.
Bankers and arms companies pull the levers.
THEY profit. WE die.
U.S. trade supports mass murder. U.K. government
wants a piece of the action.
*
*
*
It’s time to RESIST.
Numbers for Nixon:
U.S. military spending 1968, 9.4% of GDP.
U.S. soldiers killed last year, 9,414 killed,
55,390 wounded.
Vietnamese and Cambodian dead are not counted,
hundreds of thousands so far, maybe millions.
We are acting in solidarity with all oppressed
people across the world. Our attack is violent
because violence is the only language THEY
understand.
RISE UP!
MAY DAY 1970
We posted copies of our communiqué to mainstream newspapers and the underground press. From telephone booths we
phoned the BBC and ITV, claiming responsibility. Then we waited.
Three days later there had been no response. No news reports. No
commentary. No acknowledgment at all. It was as if the bomb
hadn’t detonated. But we’d heard the sound, a mu0ed crump.
We’d seen emergency vehicles racing toward the scene. The day
afterward the bank was closed. Wooden boards covered the building’s ground-.oor façade.
Does something exist if it’s unobserved? Does something happen
if it is not reported?
***
Renounce anger, forsake pride. Sorrow cannot touch the man who is
not in thrall to anything, who owns nothing. This car, with its silt of
water bottles and maps and fast-food packaging in the footwell.
This body.
It smells, this body that is not my body. These unwashed clothes,
these furred teeth. This face coated with grime and sweat.
South of Paris the country has changed. The air is warm and
pine trees line the road. I catch a glimpse of a river, a .ash of blue
water scattered with white boulders. On impulse I take the next
turning and make my way down toward it. Leaving the car in a
clearing carpeted with pine needles and scraps of blue plastic, I
pick my way to the water, where the light is harsh and bright.
I take o, my shirt and shoes. The stones are painfully hot, a bed
of coals for me to walk across. No one seems to be around, so I
strip naked and wade into the deepest part of the river, where it’s
slimy underfoot and the shock of the cold, up to my knees, thighs,
chest, persuades me that I’m still more or less alive. I stay in until
I’m shivering, then clamber onto a large .at boulder and lie down.
The sun quickly begins to dry o, my skin.
I’m exhausted.
An orange bloom of light on my closed eyelids. Orange wallpaper in a hotel room, nauseating op-art swirls rotating as I drink
and fret and wait for Miles. Heat like the -erce heat of the dry
season at Wat Tham Nok, when the ground hardens and the grass
underfoot is parched and brittle. The lizard that squats for hours
on the wall of my cell. It’s there when I go out to do my chores,
still in the same spot when I get back. I sprinkle water on
the ground in front of the farang block to lay the dust, sweep the
.agstones, line up the battered metal buckets for the morning
purge, then walk over to the monastery o/ce to help Phra Anan
with the accounts and the registration letters. Translating the
letters, learning scraps of French and Dutch and German: I
pray for you to help my son with his addiction. I feel you are his last
chance . . . Every day the lizard is waiting for me, judging me with
its little liquid eyes. How have I done? Have I trodden lightly? The
tinselly promise of religion: follow the instructions, -nd the exit.
Orange, fading to guilty red, .aring up to an unbearable dazzling
white as I open my eyes, then fading again as I drowse, watching
seven-year-old Sam playing with a bucket and spade, pottering
around and chattering to some invisible friend. Her arms and
legs are less chubby than last year, her game more organized.
My daughter, not by blood but because I notice such changes. My
daughter because I love. Miranda, some way down the beach,
looking for fossils, stooping to examine a -nd. Anna, walking away
up the hill. Tall, rangy Anna, smoking a cigarette. What will I say
to you? I’m driving south because I have something to ask you,
but do I know what it is? I think I want to ask why you carried
on, even when you must have known the revolution wasn’t getting
any closer, when it must have been obvious you weren’t changing
anything, just piling up horror. Did you still have a choice, by
then? Grainy photographs of the burning embassy building.
Uniformed police gesturing, looking up at the balcony. How did
you survive? Who was the dead woman if it wasn’t you? And who
helped you, Anna? What deals did you have to make to be allowed
to live in peace in your little village, to walk up the hill carrying
a string bag of melons, smoking a cigarette? When you cut up
the fruit at your table, what do you feel? When you look back at
your life, does it make sense? That’s what I want to know. That’s
the answer I need from you.
For a year after that bombing, we fought a strange, silent war.
Our -rst targets were corporate, because we believed corporations
were pulling the strings of government. After the bank bomb, we
attacked a chemical company, a subsidiary of a group that sold
defoliants and white phosphorous to the American army. VICTORY
TO THE NLF AND ALL THIRD WORLD REVOLUTIONARIES .
We bombed the head o/ce of a construction -rm with a contract
to build new prisons. We bombed a bank that -nanced the regime
in South Africa. WE ARE EVERYWHERE, we wrote. WE ARE
IN YOUR OFFICES YOUR FACTORIES WE ARE THE MAN
AND WOMAN NEXT TO YOU ON THE TUBE THE BUS THE
TRAIN . Anna and I composed them together, lying on the .oor or
sitting at a rickety Formica table in one of the .ats we rented after
we closed down Thirteen.
Their
Their
Their
Their
school is a concentration camp.
factory is a concentration camp.
prison is a concentration camp.
hospital is a concentration camp.
Concentration Camp Britain.
We are the Jews.
Can you smell smoke?
We’d argue about the tone, veering between a terse, tabloid
style we hoped would speak to the masses and the technicalities
of an argument we wanted to make to other revolutionaries. As
we wrote them, our statements felt reasoned and sober. If they
sounded harsh or hysterical, we felt it was only because we were
speaking truth to power and the truth was bleak. We drafted
them in a notebook, then made copies with a child’s printing set,
sealing them and giving them to militant friends to circulate to
the media.
Lessons: how to police each other, how to
persecute the weak. State machine, making the
citizens it needs. Bells telling you when to sit,
when to stand. Can you handle it? Always productive, always on time. Ring ring! Mummy, Daddy,
Janet, and John. Open up, pop it in. The State
installs the cop in your head.
SMASH THE STATE! OFF THE PIG!
The silence was eerie, absolute. Nothing in the papers, nothing on
the TV. We tried to seed rumors, put out feelers to the underground
press, who were running lurid stories about the Brigate Rossi in Italy,
the German RAF, the PLO, the Weathermen. Nothing came of it,
nothing re.ected back to us at all. It was obvious the mainstream
media had been instructed not to run the story, but why was
no one else asking questions? How many accidental -res and
midnight gas explosions would people accept? Richest one thousand have more than poorest two billion. A billion
live and die on a dollar a day. It was as if we were
shouting into a vacuum. I began to wonder what else took place in
this silence, how much dark matter there really was in the universe.
Our lives changed very rapidly that year. We moved out of
Thirteen, splitting up to stay in rented .ats, two in London, the
other in Manchester. I cut my hair and started to dress conservatively, something I found oddly wrenching. I hadn’t realized how
attached I was to my Bohemian self-image, how empty it would
feel to be a man in slacks and a drip-dry shirt. Passing other young
people on the street, I’d feel angry and envious. In Criticism-SelfCriticism I was diagnosed as a closet élitist, still trying to set myself
apart from the proletariat. Since we’d stopped organizing or participating in mass actions, I knew the others were just as isolated as
I was. We saw no one, spoke to no one who wasn’t part of an
increasingly narrow and rari-ed network. What, I wondered, was
the di,erence between a vanguard and an élite?
Discipline, certainty: the way they seem to bleed into one
another, to blur at their borders. Because I am disciplined I am
certain. Because I am certain, I am disciplined.
Sean pinned a magazine picture to the kitchen wall, a NASA
image of the earth seen from space. It was the only decoration in
the tiny Kentish Town .at and it wormed its way into our heads.
A green and blue disc surrounded by in-nite blackness. The shortest
of shorthands. We were on the world’s side, the side of life.
WE ARE EVERYWHERE. We needed funds. Our best source of
money was cars, luxury models we stole from quiet streets in
Mayfair and Belgravia. The market is not nature. The
ruling classes are not invulnerable. They have no
immutable right to power. First comes refusal, then
resistance. Fumble with the lock, break open the plastic housing
round the ignition and yank out the cable. Touch the wires together,
then listen for the starter motor. We sold the cars to a connection
of Leo’s, a feral-looking ex-con called Fenwick who ran a garage
out of a railway arch in Bethnal Green. It wasn’t an arrangement
I felt happy about. Fenwick had little reason to be loyal to us, still
less the pair of black mechanics he had working for him. I never
knew their names and they never asked questions, but they were
always checking us out. They knew there was something odd about
us. Our accents, our manner. We didn’t -t. I hoped Fenwick was
spreading a little of his pro-t around.
Pigs, know that we can get to you behind your
high walls, your mock-Tudor mansions, your barracks,
your police stations, your plush offices. There is
nowhere to hide. Sean and Leo went to meet a Spanish contact
in Earls Court, someone connected with the anti-Franco resistance.
They took elaborate precautions, getting on and o, buses and
trains, watching, doubling back. They came back with two handguns, snub black Czech pistols that they proudly unwrapped on
the kitchen table. The guns looked brand new.
“What are we going to do with these?” I asked.
“Expropriations,” said Sean, pointing one at the wall and
squeezing the trigger. “And self-defense, of course.”
“It’s a serious business,” said Leo, pointing the other at Sean. He
swung round, so the muzzle was pointing at me. “Have a go?”
We had a rule. We’d all agreed. We would attack property but
never people. That was supposed to be an absolute prohibition, a
line we would never cross. What good, I wanted to know, was a
gun against a building? Sean told me to relax. It was all spectacle.
We had no reason to use them.
As it turned out, I wasn’t the only one with misgivings. A few
days later Sean went over to the other London .at. He arrived back
a couple of hours later, swearing and slamming the door. I’d never
seen him so angry. “I’ll kill them,” he said. “I’ll fucking kill them.”
He picked up a co,ee mug and smashed it against a wall. “Fucking
cowards. Can you believe it?”
It was a while before I could get any sense out of him. Helen
and Matthias had disappeared. They’d packed their things and left.
They hadn’t communicated with anyone. Jay, who’d been staying
with them, thought they’d seemed unhappy, but hadn’t noticed
anything out of the ordinary. The news provoked a .urry of paranoia. We wondered if they’d informed on us, if perhaps we were
about to be raided by the police. In the next few hours, we moved
the guns and explosives out of their hiding place under the .oorboards and left London.
Through Claire, we’d found ourselves a hideaway, a tumbledown
farmhouse in North Wales that we could use in emergencies.
Driving there, behind the wheel of a stolen Ford Cortina, I tried
to work out what had happened. The last Criticism-Self-Criticism
had been particularly hard on Helen. She’d admitted she was
missing the work she used to do, the women’s group, the housing
activism. Though Matthias had covered for her, it was obvious she
was losing faith. Anna told her bluntly that her problem was
psychological. If she agreed in theory that we had to resist the
power of the state, it must be the reality she found disturbing. Leo
joined in. He’d said he’d always thought of her as a typical intellectual, happiest with ideas, so nice and neat and antiseptic. Why
couldn’t she admit that real people disgusted her, that she wished
she was back in the library? When Matthias tried to defend her, he
too was accused of harboring reactionary tendencies. The whole
tenor of their relationship was suspect. Monogamy was tied up
with all sorts of other capitalist formations. If they couldn’t bring
themselves to reject that particular residue of the old world, who
knew what other sentiments they might be harboring? After a
couple more hours, Helen was in tears. Matthias tried angrily to
leave, but we prevented him, blocking the door. It was one of our
new rules that no one could leave a Criticism-Self-Criticism session
until the group agreed it was -nished. Nothing could be broken
o,. Every interaction, every interrogation, had to run until the
bitter end.
So instead of complying with the will of the collective, Matthias
and Helen had run away. The rest of us—eight or nine people, as
I remember—met up in Wales, more or less convinced none of us
had been followed. Outside, rain lashed at the windows as we tried
to light a -re in the damp hearth. In the corner of the room a
carryall contained the guns and explosives. Everyone was nervous
and depressed, except Anna, who chain-smoked cigarettes and
stared into the -re and talked, half to herself, half to the room.
She approached the situation methodically. This wasn’t a problem.
It was an opportunity, a chance for us to con-rm our commitment
to the armed struggle. Matthias and Helen had shown us they were
objectively reactionary. Of course it was hard for us to accept. We’d
loved them, treated them as our brother and sister, but they were
pigs, end of story. They were pigs and now they’d gone. Things
like this were to be expected. As revolutionaries, worse misfortunes
would happen to us than losing a weak comrade like Helen. Once
we became a serious threat to the state, we shouldn’t expect it to
show us any mercy. It was important to know this, to know how
strong we had to be. She proposed an answer. We should conduct
a Criticism-Self-Criticism session to discover if anyone else was
thinking of leaving or, worse, was working for the enemy. We had
to nip our paranoia in the bud. Sean caught on quickly. We had to
trust one another. It was, he agreed, the only way. That night he
and Anna seemed to be marching in lock-step. They were thinking
with one mind, -nishing each other’s sentences.
Sean produced a sheet of blotter acid. By then the only drug we
used with any regularity was speed and none of the rest of us liked
the idea of tripping in our anxious, mistrustful state. Sean argued
that this was exactly why it was necessary. If we were going to
break down barriers, everything had to be in play, everything out
in the open. So we sat round the -re and swallowed our hits,
washing them down with gulps of ice-cold water, drawn from the
pump outside the kitchen door. Then, to my horror, Sean loaded
a round into one of the pistols and put it on the rug in front of
the -re, smiling beati-cally.
“Now you’re just being stupid,” I told him.
“Why do you say that, Chris? Afraid you might use it? Afraid it
might get used on you?”
“Of course I’m afraid.”
“He’s right,” said Anna. “Enough macho bullshit. It’s not going
to help anything.”
But no one made a move to take the thing away, so it sat there
on the rug and we stared at it until Anna told Leo she didn’t think
he really believed in building the revolution and Leo defended himself
and made a counteraccusation and gradually we were all drawn in,
pointing, shouting, putting one another to the question, everyone
an inquisitor, a Dzherzhinsky, a Beria strutting about in our psychedelic Lubyanka basement. I don’t remember much about what
happened, except that it was frightening and sometimes physical and
all night the gun sat there in the middle of the .oor, radiating
malevolent potential. We ruthlessly hunted down every molecule of
Fascism and Imperialism in one another until at last it was daylight
and we were all exhausted, shaking as we came down, -nally
convinced there were no traitors, that we were all committed and
prepared to carry on. Claire made strong sweet tea and it tasted like
life itself. I remember looking out of the window, feeling scoured,
puri-ed, my hands trembling as I held the mug.
That afternoon we went out walking across the hills, following
a ridgeline high above the scribble of stone walls and sheepfolds
around the farmhouse. I was beside Anna, the others straggling
out ahead of us, making for a cairn of stones marking a nearby
peak. We’d said very little, each lost in thought. On impulse I asked
her the question that kept echoing back to me. Miles’s question in
the cells at Bow Street.
“What do you think it will look like?”
“What?”
“After the revolution. What kind of place will this be?”
“That’s not for us to know.”
“What do you mean, not for us to know? That just sounds like
mysticism.”
“Not mysticism, historical process. It doesn’t matter what we
think, because the future will be determined by the will of the
masses, not a few individuals.”
“Sure, but you must think about it. What do you imagine, when
you imagine it?”
“I don’t, Chris.”
“Why not?”
“Because I won’t see it, and thinking about it would make me
sad.”
A couple of months later, we got a letter from Helen, postmarked
Frankfurt, West Germany. It said she and Matthias had moved there
to live in a Sponti commune. She was involved with a Kinderladen
and Matthias was working for a magazine. They wanted us to know
that in their opinion we’d started to reproduce all the worst forms
of hegemonic domination in our conditioning. We should reconnect with the working class or risk succumbing to our latent group
Fascism. Helen also wrote that she was pregnant. She hoped her
child would be brought up in an atmosphere free of nihilism, safe
from our perverse fascination with horror.
Pigs, I thought. Traitors.
***
The more the worker expends himself in work, the
more powerful becomes the world of objects, which
he creates in the face of himself, and the poorer
he himself becomes in his inner life, the less he
belongs to himself. Anna and I stand in an elevator on our
way up the tallest building in Britain. It’s -ve hundred and eighty
feet high. The elevator is traveling at a thousand feet a minute. I
know a great deal about this building, the Post O/ce Tower. I
know about the TV and telephone tra/c it routes through powerful
microwave transmitters. I know about the radar aerial at the top,
designed for short-range weather forecasting. I know something
about the layout of the upper .oors, where this elevator is taking
us. If I stare straight forward, my view of the steel elevator doors
is barred at the periphery by the unfamiliar black plastic frames
of a pair of glasses. I can see my re.ection in the polished metal,
not clearly, but as a kind of fuzzy impressionistic blur. The dyed
reddish-brown hair, the gray smudge of my suit. Beside me Anna
shifts from foot to foot, uncomfortable in her high heels. Her
face is obscured by her wig, a curtain of long blond hair cut into
a severe, unfashionable bob.
We have a dinner reservation at the Top-of-the-Tower revolving
restaurant. Name of Beresford. I’ve eaten there once before. I’ve
been to the viewing gallery and the cocktail bar. I’ve seen the arc
of tables on the revolve next to the plate-glass windows, the threetiered bu,et displays in the center, stacked with dramatically lit
piles of fruit and crudités. I know the location of the bathrooms
and the emergency stairs. I know that this is the restaurant’s busiest
night of the week.
The elevator stops at the thirty-fourth .oor and we step out
onto an expanse of lurid blue and red carpet, woven with the
restaurant’s logo. The whole place is blue and red. Red vinyl
banquettes. Blue curtains. Blue tablecloths with red borders. We’re
shown to our table by a man with a phoney French accent who
introduces himself as Gustav. The menu is also phoney and French,
snobbishly printed without translation. Screw you if you don’t
know the di,erence between consommé au paillettes and créme à la
reine. All the luxuries can be had at the top of the tower. Oysters
and caviar. Sole in a champagne and lobster sauce.
The waiter hands me the wine list and does fussy things with
the napkins. Anna looks out of the window. She’s wearing heavy
makeup. Lots of blue eye shadow and burgundy lips, a face to
match the décor.
We sit in silence, revolving slowly over Fitzrovia. The sun has
gone down and the buildings are constellations of lighted windows,
a vertical column of lights marking Centre Point, a black void the
open space of Regent’s Park. Remembering how we’re supposed
to be behaving, I take out my camera and click the shutter pointlessly into the darkness outside. Then, impulsively, I take a picture
of Anna.
“Don’t do that,” she snaps. The waiter comes back, pours the
wine for me to taste, takes our order. We do our best to appear
animated, the young married couple from the suburbs, up in
London for a special night out. We’re good at it. I almost believe
in us. What, I wonder, if we were what we appear to be? What if
we could just sit here and hold hands, toasting each other and
looking out over London?
“I’m going to do it now,” she says. Without waiting for me to
reply, she slides her bag from its position under the table, picks it
up and heads in the direction of the toilet. I try not to stare. I don’t
want anyone to follow my eyeline. I sit, looking -xedly out of the
window. One full revolution takes twenty-two minutes. I have
completed an arc of perhaps a hundred and twenty degrees when
Anna returns, still carrying the bag.
“It’s locked,” she says. At that moment the waiter returns,
carrying two bowls of clear soup. We fall silent as he pours more
wine into our glasses.
I wait until he’s out of earshot again. “It shouldn’t be.”
“Well, it is.”
“Did you try the observation deck?”
“We don’t know anything about who’s down there.”
“It’ll be empty.”
“We don’t know that for certain.”
“I tell you, there’s no one there, not at this time. I’ll go, if you
won’t.”
This is bad. We’re not doing it properly. The Beresfords shouldn’t
be arguing with each other over their romantic dinner. Near the
toilets, behind a thick blue curtain, there’s a -re door opening onto
a narrow set of concrete stairs that leads to the observation deck
and from there to .oor thirty-two, where there’s a storeroom right
beside the emergency exit. On thirty-two there’s also a lot of
switching equipment: a bomb placed there could shut down phone
service for the whole of London. But they’ve locked the door.
They’ve locked the door, which was supposed to be open.
Our information came from a friend of a friend, a girl who used
to have a secretarial job at the GPO. At night, she said, the only
person on the upper .oors was a watchman. Jay and Leo checked
it out. One evening Jay wandered around the building for almost
half an hour without being challenged. He was the one who found
the storeroom.
But the door’s locked.
What a farce. The door’s locked and there are gun battles on
the streets of Belfast and children are dying in Biafra and in their
in-nite wisdom the British people have elected themselves a
Conservative government. The right wing press is whispering to
its readers about the enemy within, but despite our best e,orts
we’re still just a rumor, part of the toxic atmosphere of this old,
cold, gray little country. Not for long. This action will make us
real. Undeniable and real. But the door’s locked.
Here I am, surrounded by bovine executives and their
frozen-haired mistresses, proud members of the ruling class squatting in a hermetically sealed revolving bubble, chowing down on
duck à l’orange: bland and sel-sh, totally unconcerned with all the
horror in.icted in their name. I’ve made hating them into such a
habit that I don’t really see them anymore, don’t regard any one
of these rich white people as more or less attractive or clever or
cultured or better-dressed than the others. They’re an abstraction,
a quantity of power that has to be moved from one side of the
balance sheet to the other. As individuals, they have no substance
for me at all.
But we are agreed. We respect human life. That’s the di,erence
between us and them. We’ve taken care not to hurt anyone with
our bombs. But we need to make a point. It’s time to put an end
to the silence. In Britain, established power likes things discreet.
Confrontation is always a sign of failure. When the system’s
working, the energies of those who resist it are always di,used,
our anger spiraling down into some soft and foggy place where
there’s no obvious enemy, just a row of civil service desks and a
faint, receding peal of trumpets.
I can’t taste my soup. Mechanically I spoon it into my mouth.
The door. The fucking door.
“Give me the bag,” I say to Anna.
“You can’t carry a woman’s bag through the restaurant. People
will notice. It’ll be too obvious.”
“Just give me the fucking bag.”
I have to do something. I can’t sit and eat. My stomach has
cramped up.
“I’ll do it,” she says, and gets up again, toting the heavy bag over
her shoulder. I’m left in my seat, slowly revolving. I try to control
my breathing. In through the nose, out through the mouth.
“Is everything all right, sir?” asks the waiter, and I stare at him
as if he’s speaking a foreign language.
I don’t want death. I try to remember that. I’m twenty-two and
I want life. Life for myself, life for the world, all the people of this
fragile blue and green disc. This is my hope, as I sit at the table,
scraping breadcrumbs into patterns with the side of my knife: that
the revolution can happen through an accretion of small actions,
like moth holes on a suit left too long in a closet. Because what’s
the alternative? . Executions and prison camps and civil war
and tens of thousands dead.
Cleansing, Anna calls it. I hate that word.
I wish she’d come back. Panic is bubbling up inside me, a primal
scream, all the psychic pain knotted into my muscles. Just as sitting
still is about to become intolerable, she slides back into her seat.
She hasn’t got the bag with her. At the same time the waiter arrives
with our main course. In answer to my unspoken question she
just nods.
I stare down at my plate. A fussy little pile of mashed potato.
Green beans. A pork chop.
At three A.M we phoned in a warning. At four-thirty our bomb
blew up part of the thirty--rst .oor of the Post O/ce Tower,
sending chunks of concrete and shards of glass showering over the
roofs of Cleveland Street. By morning we were the lead item on
BBC News. London landmark a target. No one was hurt, though the
night watchman phlegmatically reported being “lifted two or three
inches” out of his armchair. A government minister gave a statement calling it an act of insanity.
SHUT DOWN THE SPECTACLE!
Last night Post Office Tower bombed.
Because it is the lobotomy machine
the pacifier
Microwaves sent out across Britain
Television transmission
the dead hand of technology
their means of control
their communications
their message
*
*
*
fairy stories to distract you
REALITY: Imperialism, Colonialism, Dictatorship
REALITY: troops on British streets
REALITY: an international state of war
REALITY: the mental patient spasms with
electricity
REALITY: dead-eyed mothers on Merseyside streets
REALITY: not a GAME SHOW
We demand complete withdrawal of American troops
from Indochina, British troops off British
streets.
WE ARE EVERYWHERE
SHUT DOWN THE SPECTACLE
DESTROY THE RULE OF CAPITAL
ARMED RESISTANCE NOW!
Even though the news report didn’t quote our communiqué I
was still ecstatic, hugging the others, even punching the air, the
idiotic gesture of a football player celebrating a goal. For a day or
two I felt slightly manic and walked the streets in an attempt to
calm myself. I covered miles of pavement, feeling the world had
subtly changed. Faintly but unmistakably our idea had been
absorbed into the air. Every passerby had been touched by it. There
we were, a headline behind the grille of the newsstand outside the
tube. There we were, propagating through the radio spectrum.
Eventually my euphoria dissipated and I found myself on London
Bridge, pushing feebly against a pinstriped tide of evening
commuters, feeling naked, surveilled. I went home and slept, the
covers pulled over my head.
I was in a Camden café with Sean when an unfamiliar face
appeared on the television above the counter. The man was a chief
superintendent in the Met, an unremarkable-looking o/cial in his
-fties or sixties, with thick-framed glasses and graying combed-over
hair. It was hard to catch what he was saying over the noise of the
diners. He stood outside Scotland Yard and spoke to an interviewer
in an unhurried, languorous voice, “educated” vowels pasted over
a Black Country accent . . . Entirely in hand . . . the object of attention
. . . who sees anything suspicious is urged to come forward . . . I examined
him, this bomb squad detective, soothing a troubled situation with
the balm of euphemism. Businesslike and professionally unemotional, a man who’d never understand that his own impersonality
was at the root of our so-called crime, that we’d placed our bombs
to destroy the rule of men who’d evacuated themselves of their
humanity, functional men like him. The enemy.
The police acted quickly. Within the next day or two, we started
hearing about busts. In Notting Hill detectives turned over every
underground household in the area. During the next few weeks,
it seemed as if every squat and commune in London got raided.
Bizarre tales -ltered back: a feminist bookshop in Stoke Newington
whose entire stock was con-scated, an International Marxist Group
organizer taken for questioning because he had fencing equipment
in his room. We’d got what we wanted. Reality. War on the state.
War, or at least talk. We were being talked about all over Britain.
the saturation of our minds with the poison of subversion has
become so constant that we are no longer even aware you say
we can support the aim while disagreeing on methods
but they should think about the damage they’re
causing to legitimate organizations trying to do
real creative grassroots work opinions that once would
have been thought frankly treasonous are openly as a tactic
it’s useless actively promoted by at least thirty known
Communist organizations and many thousands of unassociated
do these bombings ever connect anyone from different
struggles? No. Pretty much the opposite. Have they
moved any of the struggles (Ireland etc.) on to a
higher level of awareness or activity? One is continually
confronted by (occasionally well-meaning but always blinkered
and immature) there is cowboys and indians glamour and
then there is getting real often members of the privileged middle classes, who seem to believe that by the endless
repetition of slogans don’t seem to know the difference
between some kind of improvement an analysis and that’s
better than nothing they should consider the effects/
ineffectiveness of what slightest criticism of their reasoning,
let alone the suggestion that they might be fellow travelers with
totalitarianism, is met by denunciations of the most hysterical end
up busted or worse in the general crackdown only the
most closed of closed minds could have perpetrated the latest
outrage in London. The bombing of an important economic target
and familiar landmark should be roundly condemned by all who
have I wonder if the people doing these acts of socalled armed struggle ever opened up wide discussions
with other militants? further proof, if proof were needed,
that a climate exists in this country that might best be described as
a terrorist has Britain’s best interests at heart a bomb, said
Lenin penetration by subversives of the trade unions and shop
floors has led to widespread industrial strife and demoralization we
lost leaflets, copying equipment, stencils. And they
took our membership list, diaries, personal papers,
etc. the unprincipled exploitation of largely imaginary grievances
by wreckers and state-subsidized layabouts threatens to undermine
the values and ideals that we cherish as a nation exactly what
they say they’re against but they’re provoking not
soon to find ourselves minions of Moscow, we must meet the threat
of the bombers with the utmost firmness and moral clarity
The only thing the commentators and letter-writers seemed to
agree on was that we were wrong. We were mindless and evil. We
were probably mad. I was shaken by the reaction—not by the
condemnation, which I’d expected, but by the fact that most people
seemed not to understand why we’d done it. I thought our action
was so pure in motive and clear in intent that no one could fail to
understand it. I thought we were a spark. My expectations seem
extraordinary to me now.
I tried to hide my disappointment from the others, but it came
out as a bitter rant against our supposed fellow revolutionaries.
Their reaction smelled, I said, like fear. Secretly they didn’t want
anything to change. They were just having a good time playing
Che and pushing policemen at demos. There was more, which I
didn’t say, about my own fear—that we were the fools who’d
believed, poor political Tommies, who’d charged over the top with
nobody following.
We had supporters: no group like ours could exist in total isolation. Though we’d severed many of our connections with the
overground Left, we had contacts, people who believed in the armed
struggle and were prepared to help us with logistics, but we had no
one to speak out in public. Our own words were still missing.
So it became real, our -ght. Or did it? We were already .oating
free, as removed from the experience of the average worker as
the diners in the restaurant at the top of the tower. After that, the
insidious message of the spectacle—that nothing takes place, even
for the participants, unless it’s electronically witnessed and played
back—took us over. We thought we were striking a blow against it,
the hypnotic dream show of fuckable bodies and consumer goods.
Instead we fell into the screen. Our world became television.
***
Orange wallpaper. Nauseating swirls. Gummed eyes, sticky mouth
and the sound of insistent knocking on the door. I pulled a sheet
round me and went to answer it. Outside I found the landlady. “Mr.
Carter is downstairs,” she told me, a look of pure hostility on her
face. “You’re late.” Obviously I’d caused her some trouble.
Miles was waiting outside, slouched in the back of a large black
Mercedes. The driver, a middle-aged Nigerian, greeted me politely. He
was playing some kind of handheld computer game, which he put
away in the glove compartment as I got in. Miles looked run down.
He had bags under his eyes, patches of shaving rash on his chin.
“Have a nice time last night?” he asked peevishly.
“You look unwell.”
“So do you. Put this on.”
He handed me a tie, an old-fashioned item with some sort of
crest repeated on a green background.
“What is it? Grenadier Guards? Old Wykehamists?”
“Just put it on. You look like you slept in that jacket.”
I knotted the tie round my neck.
“Fuck’s sake, you’re even scru/er now. Take it o,.”
We inched through the morning rush hour, the driver lurching
forward into each gap, then braking sharply. I opened the window,
hoping the fresh air would make me feel less sick. Near Regent’s
Park, Miles directed the driver to pull up outside a terrace of elegant
Regency houses. A man was waiting for us, pacing up and down
on the corner, his hands jammed into the trouser pockets of a gray
suit. He was in his late twenties or early thirties, with .oppy blond
hair and a scattering of freckles on his face, looks that would have
been charmingly boyish were it not for the crude jaw and the
unfriendly gray eyes he passed over me as he opened the front
passenger door. He had what is euphemistically termed an athletic
build, a square head rooted in a thick neck, shoulders that strained
against the fabric of his jacket as he settled himself in his seat.
“Good morning, Mr. Carter,” he said, in a public-school accent.
He didn’t introduce himself to me. Miles shot a signi-cant look in
my direction. Through my hangover I smiled back. I felt I’d achieved
something. We’d come to the edge of civility, the point beyond
which force would be used. I’d pushed him thus far, at least.
We made our way up Euston Road, slowing to a crawl outside
the grimy façade of St. Pancras station.
“Where are we going, Miles?”
“Don’t worry. Just a business breakfast. If you relax, we’ll be out
of there in half an hour and I won’t be bothering you again for a
while.”
“Really?”
“Yes, really.”
We turned into a side street near King’s Cross and parked outside
an o/ce building, some kind of recent warehouse conversion, all
sandblasted bricks and plate glass, fashionably facing the canal. The
driver opened the glove compartment and retrieved his computer
game, placidly resuming the arrangement of little falling bricks
into a wall. The big man disappeared inside the building and came
out again with a set of laminated visitor passes.
“Now,” said Miles, “this is an informal, walk-around event. Just
let me guide you. I’ll be right beside you. You don’t have to do
anything at all. You don’t even have to speak.”
We walked past the front desk into a large function room, which
had been laid out as some kind of exhibition space. A girl handed
us each a folder, pointing us toward a table laid with co,ee urns
and pitchers of juice and platters of large, rubbery-looking
croissants. We wandered around, past photographic displays and
architectural models presented on felt-covered tables. Little prison
wings. Little model -gures banged up in little cells, playing PingPong with one another in little rec rooms.
“Architects,” said Miles, gesturing at the people around us, who
were balancing cups and saucers and peering surreptitiously at one
another’s name tags as they made conversation. “Architects and
detention-center contractors. And Home O/ce people, of course.”
Pat Ellis was at the center of a knot of acolytes, who were
listening to her with rapt attention, -rst nodding in agreement,
then laughing doggedly at a joke. Without preamble, Miles gripped
my arm and steered me toward her, pushing his way into the
circle.
“How nice to see you, Minister,” he said, cutting through the
laughter.
Pat Ellis looked momentarily nonplussed, then nodded curtly
and continued her anecdote. She was talking about a visit she’d
made to some facility in Holland, what she’d said to the director,
what he’d said to her. The young man at her side, obviously some
kind of aide, frowned at us.
Miles plowed on. “You remember Chris Carver, don’t you?”
The minister broke o, again and smiled at us, a neat and practiced smile, which gave the impression of warmth without masking
her irritation. “No, I’m sorry. You’ll have to remind me.”
“Chris Carver,” repeated Miles. “Think back.”
I looked at Pat. She used to have long chestnut hair, which she
often wore in a scarf. It was gray now, bunched up in a tight,
un.attering perm. She was dressed in business uniform, like all the
people around her, a dark suit, a string of pearls doubled over
the mottled skin of her neck. I’d seen her the previous day, of
course, and before that on television, but I was unnerved to -nd
myself so close to her. I couldn’t -nd a trace of the nervous, hardworking young woman I’d once known—crushingly sincere, easily
moved to tears. The features were the same, the long nose and the
large widely spaced eyes, but the thin-lipped mouth (which I’d kissed
once, in the middle of a drunken party) had a twist of placid vanity,
the curdled self-assurance of the professional politician. She looked
at me blankly, complacently, not recognizing me. Then she made
the connection. I could see it happen, the loss of traction, the sudden
skid on the ice.
“No, I’m sorry, Mr.—uh . . .”
“Carver,” repeated Miles.
For a moment she was completely speechless. She looked at the
.oor, then at her assistant. Everyone was waiting for her to say
something. Reluctantly she turned her eyes back to me and her
expression was momentarily unguarded, almost warm. I realized,
bizarrely, that somewhere inside she was pleased to see me. Then
a .ash went o,. Miles’s young thug had taken a picture. Instantly,
the barriers slammed down. She looked about, coldly furious,
trying to spot the photographer. I opened and closed my mouth.
I wanted to say something, to disrupt the trap Miles was setting.
“Sorry, Pat,” I said. “I’m really sorry.”
“Yes,” interrupted Miles. “My apologies, Minister. I thought you
knew each other.”
He grabbed my elbow and steered me away, leaving Pat Ellis
behind us, hissing into her assistant’s ear. Miles’s thug was on the
other side of me, his hand on the small of my back, propeling me
discreetly but -rmly toward the exit. Angrily, I shook them both
o,, a violent gesture that made people turn and watch. “Excuse
me, are you with the press?” asked one of the PR women, when
we reached the door. “This is a private event. There’s no photography.” Miles made an inconclusive hand gesture at her as we
brushed past.
We got into the car. The driver put away his game and pulled
out onto the street. “Well,” said Miles, keying a text message into
his cell phone, “a bit crude, but we’ll just have to see if she takes
the hint, won’t we?”
While I tried to understand what had just taken place, Miles
relaxed into his seat, received an answer to his text, read it, and
slipped the phone into a jacket pocket.
“What hint?” I asked quietly.
“Put it this way. There are some people it’s just not appropriate
for the next Home Secretary to know. That is, if she wants to be
the next Home Secretary.”
“I keep telling you, she had nothing to do with anything. I didn’t
see her or Gavin after 6.”
“Well, you say that, Chris. And, of course, you could well be
telling the truth. But if you were a journalist, the possibility would
certainly be worth following up, wouldn’t it?”
“You can’t give this to the press.”
“Why not? I’d say it was in the public interest.”
“Why not? Please, Miles, you keep saying you’re my friend.
Think about my—my wife. Our daughter. Our daughter knows
nothing about any bombings. Think what this would do to her.”
“Yes, I do understand. You’re Michael Frame, suburban family
man, and you were rather hoping it would stay that way. But you
must have known, Chris. Sooner or later it was going to come
out.”
“But why? You’re not the police. This isn’t about bringing me
to justice or anything straightforward like that. Whatever job you’re
doing, I know you don’t give a shit about justice. What did Pat
Ellis do to you, Miles? She must have done something.”
“To me? Nothing at all. It’s just politics, Chris. Real, grown-up
politics, not the kind that starts by carving out a Utopia and then
hammering at the world, trying to make it -t. If she’s going to get
the top job, she’ll have to make sure all the stakeholders are satis-ed.
Simple as that. No mystery. No conspiracy theory. If everyone’s
happy, then this all goes away. There’ll be no need to bring you
any deeper into it and you can fuck o, back to Sussex. But if Mrs.
Ellis doesn’t play ball, she’ll -nd the media beginning to focus on
certain issues of character.”
I stared out of the window, and Marylebone Road was just a
jumble of planes and re.ections. Miles sighed, adopted an avuncular expression, and squeezed my shoulder, one—two—three, an
autistic mime of sincerity. “I am your friend, Chris. Really. And as
your friend, I think you should tell your family. They deserve to
be let into this as gently as possible.”
I wanted to kill him, to smash his face to a bloody pulp. “And
what am I going to let them into, exactly? That Daddy’s a terrorist
and he’s going to prison?”
He shrugged blandly. “Not necessarily. Everyone knows this all
happened a long time ago. Yes, you did certain things, but—well,
the context has changed. People are quite pragmatic, these days. I
won’t pretend that there won’t be pressure for an—um, judicial
dimension, but there are ways you could make the climate as
favorable as possible. If you had something to give, for
example.”
“Give?”
“Oh, God, Chris, don’t be obtuse. If you could -nd something
a little more concrete to say about Pat Ellis, you could help yourself considerably.” He looked sharply at me. “Unless you have
something else?”
“Such as?”
“It might help for you to tell me what happened. In your own
words. Who did what. A lot of that period is still rather murky.”
I said nothing, though Anna’s name was hanging in the air.
Miles put me on a train at Victoria. I slumped in a window seat
and was pulled out of London, moldering suburban stations
scrolling past as I ate a clammy sandwich and thought about powerlessness. Not about abolishing power, let alone seizing it. Having
it trample over you, take the substance of your life and grind it
between its teeth. Miles demanded a burnt o,ering: Pat Ellis or
Anna or me. Because he was powerful he would have one. Heart
and entrails, sizzling on the -re. I scrunched up the sandwich
packaging, stu,ed it into the bin behind my seat. Seeing Pat Ellis
had taken me back into our own private gray area. Of course there
was one: in every situation involving two or more people, there’s
always a gray area, a few halftone specks at the border of the black
and the white. 6 wasn’t the last time I’d seen her. It was late in
the summer of .
I don’t know what kind of -gure I must have presented. When
she answered the door of her basement .at, in one of the hilly
streets around Tufnell Park, she looked shocked. I’d turned up
unannounced. Someone had been watching the place for a few days
and we knew Gavin would be at his chambers. We’d judged her the
more sympathetic of the two, the one more likely to help.
She invited me in, not without a trace of reluctance, and we
drank mint tea, sitting on her sofa in front of a rug littered with
wooden blocks and rattles and stu,ed toys. She introduced me to
her son, Robin, who was almost a year old. I played with him for
a while, making faces and letting him grip my -ngers. Pat asked
what I’d been up to and I asked her if she still considered herself
a revolutionary. I can’t remember what formulation she used in
her reply, but she was noncommittal. I got the impression I was
making her nervous, because she kept -nding excuses to get up
and walk around, fetching things from the kitchen, fussing with
Robin. She asked again what I’d been doing and I told her (as
planned) that I was living in Leeds and was in contact with certain
comrades who were facing criminal charges arising out of their
clandestine work. The baby began to cry and she picked him up,
walking up and down, rubbing his back. She asked what kind of
charges.
“Armed robbery,” I told her.
Expropriation was logistically correct, since we needed a better
way of -nancing ourselves than car theft. It was politically correct
because it was an act of dispossession. It was tactically correct because
it was proletarian, the method of people who owned nothing, who
had no stake in the system. But our -rst attempt had gone badly
wrong. For once, I hadn’t been directly involved. It was Sean’s
project. Anna was out of the country meeting some of her Paris
contacts and he’d put it together with Leo, whose idea of planning
was as vague as his own. Accompanied by Ferdy and Quinn, two
of Leo’s old friends from the Firm, they’d gone into a bank in
Reading and held it up. Sean had -red a shot into the ceiling,
cowboy-style. According to Leo, he’d even insisted on wearing a
Stetson over his stocking mask. They’d gotten away with a fair
amount of money, but somehow Ferdy was left behind, tackled by
a passerby as they ran to the car. Though Sean had threatened to
shoot him, the man wouldn’t let go and Sean hadn’t been prepared
to pull the trigger.
I told a version of this story to Pat. Though there was no
chance of acquittal, Ferdy wanted to plead not guilty. We needed
lawyers who could run a political trial, who could use the court
to propagate our message; in that way we thought we could
salvage something from a disastrous situation. Pat heard me out,
jiggling up and down on the rug as she tried to soothe her baby.
She told me she didn’t want any part of it. She didn’t believe
there was anything to be gained from that kind of politics. She
used the same words I’d heard from so many of our supposed
allies. Adventurist, counterproductive. I argued with her for a while
and eventually she agreed to write down some names, people she
knew who might take the case. I gave her a phone number, told
her she should ring if she changed her mind. I knew she wouldn’t.
Why did she help at all? Out of friendship? To get rid of me? I
suppose one could -nd some ambiguity in it, space enough for
Miles to live and thrive. I next saw her when she popped up on
TV some time in the early nineties and I discovered that she’d
become an MP. The idea of a political trial soon faded away and
Ferdy, who refused to name his accomplices, was sentenced to
eight years in prison, without the question of his political motivation even being raised.
When I got o, the train at Chichester I went straight to God’s
and drank myself into a stupor, sitting in front of the gas -re with
a bottle of supermarket Scotch. He must have come downstairs
and found me, because when I woke up the next morning, feeling
shaky and bleak, I found a blanket thrown over me and a glass of
water and a foil strip of painkillers waiting on the desk. God wasn’t
given to making conversation, least of all in the morning. As I tried
to gather myself to leave, he shu0ed around the shop and
pretended to look for something in the theology section, working
up courage to speak.
“I don’t like to pry, Mike,” he said gru0y, after several minutes
of inner struggle, “but is everything all right at home?”
“Don’t worry, God. I’ll be -ne.”
He looked immensely relieved that I wasn’t going to force any
intimacies on him. I was touched. I knew what it had cost him
even to broach the subject. A great respecter of the private pain
of others, Godfrey.
***
I must have fallen asleep, because when I open my eyes the sun is
low and my skin feels hot and tight around my face. I sit up,
watched suspiciously by a family of picnickers who’ve set themselves up elaborately on the riverbank, a small brightly colored
complex of windbreaks and umbrellas and barbecue equipment.
My head is swimming. I’m very dehydrated. I dress and pick my
way back across the rocks and up the path to the car, where I
change my shirt and gulp down half a bottle of warm water. Then
I sit on a bench, listening to the buzzing of the .ies round the
over.owing litter-bins. The air is fragrant, heavy as lead.
I drive through the evening, passing Bordeaux just as the light
fails. The radio chatters and spits out pop songs and the road
climbs through foothills into the darkness. Little by little, my skin
exhales heat and the bends sharpen into hairpins, dented metal
barriers gleaming suddenly in the headlights. I’m close now. Only
another hour to Sainte-Anne. I don’t feel ready. I want to swing
the car round, to defer the moment when I’ll -nd myself face to
face with Anna.
After the Post O/ce Tower, the con.ict escalated. We began to
hear rumors of other actions, ones we hadn’t carried out. Someone
blew up a railway line in Ayrshire, near the Cairnryan ferry to
Northern Ireland. They phoned in a warning to British Rail, told
them not to allow their trains to be used as troop transports. There
were attacks on electrical installations, airline o/ces, and embassies. Some of our friends were arrested, notably Alex Hill from the
Sylvan Close occupation, who apparently had a copy of one of our
communiqués in his .at. Many more had their homes raided and
their possessions smashed or taken away for examination. I
remember Sean remarking sarcastically that if having your record
collection trashed was su/cient to radicalize someone, a revolutionary situation would exist in Britain within weeks.
We responded with two further actions. Leo and Claire planted
a bomb in a gambling club patronized by senior American o/cers,
which demolished the entire rear elevation of the building, a
mansion house in St. James’s. Because of Agent Orange
leaching into the earth of Cambodia, because of
white phosphorus burning through the skin of small
children. Britain is not a safe haven for the strategists of extermination. Nowhere in the world will
they be protected from the guerrilla, acting in
support of the people of Indochina. We phoned in a
warning and the place was cleared, though we heard the next day
that two people had been hurt by .ying glass. They were our -rst
casualties, but I don’t remember any particular discussion about
them. I think we blamed it on the police. A second bomb, placed
outside an air force base, failed to detonate. It was suggested in the
underground press that the attacks were the work of neo-Fascists,
trying to discredit the Left. We read a dozen theoretical demonstrations of the objectively counterrevolutionary nature of our actions,
a dozen more of the historical inevitability of our failure, but it
seemed to us that history was on our side. Every week there were
more strikes. Dockers, car workers. Ninety Soviet diplomats had
been expelled from Britain, accused of spying. An anti-Communist
panic was sweeping the country, which seemed to be completely
polarized between those who were more terri-ed of Moscow and
those who were more terri-ed by the binary madness of the Cold
War. It was a question of gut feeling: you chose one kind of fear
or the other. Not being afraid wasn’t an option.
A message to all those comrades who feel that
revolutionary action is not appropriate in the U.K.
because this is a place where the forces of reaction are strong. If you believe, as we do, that
Imperialism is a paper tiger, then nowhere can be
excluded as the site of struggle. You say we are
squandering revolutionary energy, that adventurism
is a characteristic deviation in times of weakness.
We say agitation and propaganda are insufficient. If
that’s the sum of your ambitions, you should be
ashamed.
Sometimes it felt as if we were spending more time arguing
about money than about strategy. Like our failure to discuss the
injuries at the gambling club, this should have been a warning to
me, a sign that things were beginning to degenerate, but we were
desperate for funding and prepared to do more or less anything to
get it. A friend of Jay’s worked for a record company. Through him
we were introduced to an underground character called Nice Mike,
who wanted to score -fty thousand hits of acid o, some Liverpool
gangsters who had a lab down in Devon, at a farmhouse out on
Exmoor. Nice Mike didn’t trust the people he was involved with
and wanted to take along some protection. Jay suggested us.
It was risky. We knew nothing about Nice Mike’s contacts. We
didn’t know a great deal about Nice Mike himself. I disliked him
on sight, an overweight south Londoner with shoulder-length hair
and loud Carnaby Street clothes, who set up our -rst meeting in
a trendy bar and seemed incapable of answering direct questions.
He laid out his proposition in an exaggeratedly soothing tone, as
if lulling children to sleep. We told him nothing about our political
activities; he seemed satis-ed with the story that we were ordinary
criminals, connected with some unspeci-ed east-London gang. He
was prepared to pay cash up front plus more when he’d sold the
drugs. Despite our misgivings, we agreed.
He wanted to drive down to Devon, which was -ne, but on
the appointed day he turned up in an absurdly conspicuous car,
a bright blue Bentley, loaded with gadgets that he insisted on
demonstrating to us, like a salesman. The heated leather seats,
the eight-track built into the dashboard. On the road he played
acid rock and clicked his many elaborate silver rings on the
steering wheel, bragging about the famous groups he dealt to
when they were passing through London. It was all birds and
backstage and Jimmy this and Mick that, clicking his damn rings
on the wheel in time to the beat.
It soon became apparent that Mike was very nervous. As he
drove he smoked joints, stubbing them out in the ashtray, weaving
alarmingly in and out of the tra/c, occasionally freaking himself
out about phantom objects in his peripheral vision and pulling the
wheel round to avoid them. Luckily the car handled like a boat or
I swear he would have spun it. He wasn’t helped by his glasses, big
octagonal things with a heavy blue tint that must have increased
the weirdness several-fold. When we passed Stonehenge he insisted
on stopping, as if we were on some kind of excursion. The three
of us—Sean, Jay, and I—trailed after him while he wandered round
the stones, waving his arms and intoning a lot of faux-Druidic
nonsense, invoking the pagan gods to bless our endeavor and
promising to “make a sacri-ce upon our return.”
When we got back into the car, which was parked on the grass
shoulder by the roadside, Mike scrabbled around in the glove
compartment and pulled out a plastic bag of pills. “Want anything?
We need to maintain our edge, yeah?” I told him I thought what
we needed was to keep our shit together and he got very defensive.
Who was I to say who did or didn’t have their shit together? Who
the fuck was I? He kept repeating it, his tone increasingly selfrighteous. “I mean, who the fuck are you? How do I even know
you have your shit together?”
We ate a tense fry-up at a Little Chef somewhere in Somerset,
wreathed in cigarette smoke and mutual distrust. In the middle of
the crowded diner, Mike decided to start talking about guns. We’d
brought guns, right? We were packing, because we needed to be
packing, because he hadn’t paid for fucking amateurs, OK? He’d
thought we were going to look heavier. We didn’t look heavy
enough. He was speaking very loudly. The subject of guns seemed
to tug his accent partway across the Atlantic. People were staring.
Young families, truck drivers.
The only way to shut him up was to walk out, so that was what
we did, leaving our plates of food half -nished on the table. When
we got back to the car, I took his keys and Sean shoved him into
the back seat of the Bentley, still protesting about his eggs and his
second cup of tea. Jay kept watch, leaning on the car, as Sean and
I got in beside him and shut the door.
Sean was direct. “Now, look here, you decadent little fucker. If
this goes bad I’m going to cut your balls o, and make you eat
them, you understand?”
Nice Mike’s eyes narrowed in suspicion. “Don’t you dare rip me
o,. If you rip me o, you’ll regret it. I’ve got friends, man. You
touch any of my money and I’m telling you right here and now
that you’ll regret it.”
We quizzed him again about the people we were going to meet,
what he knew of their background, who else he’d told about the
deal. He was evasive, panicky. Then we locked him in the car while
we went for a quick walk round the forecourt.
“You know what?” said Sean. “We should just dump the cunt.
Take the money, take the car and have done with it. We don’t need
to go to Devon.”
“It’ll come back to us,” argued Jay. “He’s not kidding about
having friends.”
Like Sean, I’d had enough of Nice Mike. “Fuck his friends,” I
said. It was two to one, so we went back to the Bentley and told
him how it was going to be. When he argued, Sean stuck a gun
in his mouth, to prove he was “packing.” We took Mike’s briefcase
of cash and his bag of pills and drove away in his ridiculous car,
leaving him kneeling by the side of the road, his eyes tightly shut
and his hands clasped in front of him, as if in prayer. If he had
friends, they never found us.
Was that before or after Anna went to Paris? I’m honestly not
sure. Maybe it’s the stress we were living under or maybe it’s just
too long ago, but that year exists for me only as a series of fragments, shards of memory I can’t -t together and don’t quite trust.
I know my mind is capable of playing tricks, not just in sequencing
but in deeper, more subtle ways. For example, I remember da,odils
in the graveyard where I walked with Anna, looking for dead babies.
It was a little Norman church with a lychgate and moss-covered
gravestones leaning at drunken angles. The light of my memory
is golden-hour light, warm and di,use. Sunshine-yellow da,odils
are scattered in the long grass. Sunshine-yellow and paper-white.
But that would place it in early spring, and it was certainly later
than that, months later.
I remember, very clearly it seems to me, what she looked
like and how she was dressed. Her hair was cropped short, her
arms and legs bare. There was a softness about her body that I
associate with periods when she was happy, when she allowed
herself to be less rigorous and austere. We were laughing, strolling
through the churchyard like conventionalized lovers, bathed in the
yellow light that’s now eternally the light of , not just for me
but for everyone who saw a -lm or looked at a magazine that year.
Dazzle and softness and lens .are.
We held hands. I can’t have concocted that. She talked about
her childhood. For most children, the world is de-ned by the
sensory; by likes and dislikes, favorite smells and tastes. Anna’s
narrative was mostly about ideas. Witness, duty. It’s the only time
I remember hearing her speak about her family. She was an only
child, precocious and diligent, the repository of all her Quaker
parents’ wishes for the future. She didn’t say much about her
mother, but spoke of her father with respect and what sounded
like regret. He’d been, she said, like an exam board, asking her
general knowledge questions at the dinner table, testing her on
her memory for various prayers and catechisms. She recited for
me, in an ironic sing-song voice: We utterly deny all outward wars
and strife, and fightings with outward weapons, for any end or under any
pretense whatever; this is our testimony to the whole world.
“He knows someone has to -ght,” she told me. “That’s what
makes him unforgivable. He’s just too -nicky to do it himself.”
Later, I saw a picture of her father, a gaunt man in an oldfashioned woollen waistcoat, staring de-antly at the camera as he
defended his dead terrorist daughter to a magazine journalist. He’d
taken her on demonstrations, taught her that it was sometimes
necessary to exercise dissent if one wanted to have a conscience
void of o,ense toward God and toward men. The journalist
described him as a religious zealot.
Anna remembered playing at the back of meeting halls during
lectures, whispering to her doll. She looked so lonely, as she told
me that; I reached for her instinctively. I was hurt when she started
to speak to me in the jargon of Criticism-Self-Criticism, reproaching
me for allowing myself to get distracted. “What about pleasure?”
I asked, trying to sound sarcastic. She told me .atly that our
pleasure wasn’t relevant to the struggle. It was only through the
struggle that we could materialize ourselves in a meaningful way.
If I wanted to fuck, she said, we could fuck; but politically she was
sick of fucking.
I was so angry that I couldn’t speak. Was that what she thought?
That I only wanted to fuck? She walked a few feet away, looking
down at the line of headstones.
“Here’s one,” she said.
And there it was, in gold letters on a little white marble slab.
MICHAEL DAVID FRAME
4.10.48–1.12.50
“RESTING WHERE NO SHADOWS FALL”
“That could do for you.” She got out a notebook and started
taking down the details.
In the car on the way back to London she told me, almost casually, that she’d been approached, through one of her Paris friends,
by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. The PFLP
had o,ered us funds and training. She was going to Paris to meet
one of their representatives.
I was stunned. Why hadn’t I been told? This was the most
important news imaginable and she hadn’t even discussed it with
the rest of us before agreeing to a meeting. There were a thousand
political questions. There were security issues. I started to argue
with her but she brought me up short by telling me that the others
had already agreed. She and Sean had discussed it in some detail,
she said. Sean thought it was the right move. Leo and Jay were in
agreement too.
“The revolutionary is a doomed man,” wrote Nechayev. “He has
no interests of his own, no a,airs, no feelings, no belongings, not
even a name.” The monks at Wat Tham Nok would recognize that,
I think. If to be a revolutionary is to be nameless, without attachments, then a revolutionary is simply a person who has understood
the -rst three of the Four Noble Truths of Buddhism. He sees
su,ering, sees that its cause lies in greed and craving; he also
sees that it could potentially come to an end. But what’s the right
way to end su,ering? The revolution, giving yourself up to history?
Or Nibbana, giving yourself up to transcendence? Phra Anan,
whose English was good enough to discuss such things with me,
had no time for history. “Too much history in Indochina,” he’d say,
shaking his stubbly head. “Less history needed, not more.”
After so long living as Mike Frame, it’s sometimes hard to -nd
my way back to Chris Carver, to remember why he made the
choices he did. There seems such an obvious split between how I
wanted things to be and how they actually were, not just in the
world but in our group, our little cell. We were supposed to be a
band of equals, committed to abolishing every trace of power in
our relationships with one another. But once Anna and Sean started
taking decisions on their own, that was self-evidently no longer
true. I was twenty-three by then. Not so young. Old enough to
know that taking your desires for reality wasn’t a straightforward
answer to anything.
With the bene-t of hindsight, it’s easy to see that Anna and Sean
had always been in front, daring one another to go further out
onto the ledge. In a way it seems extraordinary that they took so
long to fuse together, to start acting in concert. When they did,
they ran the rest of us o, our feet. The PFLP contact was the -rst
incontrovertible sign that I was no longer in control of my life. I
should have seen I was heading into the darkness. I should have
gotten o, the bus.
At the time I got bogged down in detail. I knew very little about
the Middle East and, unlike a lot of my friends, I had an instinctive
sympathy with the Israelis. After the concentration camps, who
could deny them a home? On the other hand, the cruelties in.icted
on the Palestinians were undeniable. Anna poured scorn on my
confusion. The PFLP were Marxist-Leninists. They were -ghting
Imperialism. That should be enough. It wasn’t necessary to get into
the intricacies of their political position, or to agree with everything
they did. It would be a pragmatic alliance. Their contact in Paris
would pay us three thousand U.S. dollars a month, which would
solve our money worries at a stroke. Our people could go out to
Lebanon and receive proper weapons and explosives training. We’d
become an e,ective -ghting force. What was there to discuss?
So Anna disappeared to Paris and stayed away for weeks. Sean
organized his disastrous bank raid. I sent o, for a birth certi-cate
in the name of Michael Frame and used it to apply for a passport.
We were all doing the same thing, developing aliases, preparing to
go underground.
***
Finally I turn o, the main road and start to pick my way up the
pass toward Sainte-Anne-de-la-Garrigue. It’s after midnight and the
petrol gauge has dipped into the red. I drive very slowly; my tired
eyes are producing phantoms, shadows that race across the road
and .icker in the rearview mirror.
I crest the col and see that the tower is illuminated, its blocky
form like a lighthouse guiding me in. I bump my way over the
cobbles into the main square, where I park in front of the church,
on the spot where the righteous Christian knights burned the
heretics on their pyre. Miranda: Why should I care what happened
here? . . . It’s just a pretty little village square on a very hot day. Well,
it’s cold now, the air whipping round me in icy gusts as I get out
of the car and stretch, trying to work the cramp of two days’
driving out of my body. Though there’s a light in the Bar des
Sports, the door is locked and no one answers when I knock. I
had some idea of getting a drink, perhaps a sandwich. Now that
I’m here I don’t know what to do. I -sh a sweater out of my bag
and walk around, feeling the blood gradually returning to my legs.
I peer up at the looming frontage of the church, with its massive
bolted wooden doors; I run my hands over the cold lip of the
drinking fountain, a carved stone bowl with a copper spout, dribbling away in front of the mairie. Finally I force myself to head
up the steep street that leads to the tower. The houses are mute,
shuttered; there’s not a radio, not a chink of light to indicate
occupation. I can’t remember which of the line of identical doors
is Anna’s and something in me recoils from the idea of knocking.
When I see her, it ought to be in daylight, so there can be no
mistake, no misrecognition. As I hesitate, a cat emerges from the
shadows. I watch it stalk down the hill, the only sign of life in a
scene as desolate and hermetic as a de Chirico piazza. Inevitably,
I end up climbing toward the tower, wreathed in a jaundiced yellow
glow at the summit of the hill.
After my trip to London I didn’t hear from Miles for a long time.
It seemed that Pat Ellis had decided to comply with the demands
of her “stakeholders,” whoever they were.
At home things had reached a new low. I’d given up hiding my
drinking and sometimes brought home bottles of wine to nurse
in the study or in front of the TV. Miranda didn’t comment; she’d
more or less stopped speaking to me. We moved around the house
in a strange silent dance, trying as far as possible to stay in separate
rooms. At God’s, I leafed through old pamphlets and thought with
increasing regularity about heroin. I’d noticed a drop-in center near
the leisure park, a nondescript building where the county Drug
and Alcohol Services ran a methadone clinic. Two or three shellsuited men were always leaning against the wall outside, slouching
in the unmistakable lizard posture of dealers. It would take half
an hour at most to score and make it back to God’s. I could sit and
smoke and think without having to care about what I was thinking.
If the dealers at the drop-in center couldn’t help me, Portsmouth,
a few miles away, was teeming with junkies. You saw heroin faces
everywhere, shu0ing about behind shopping centers, sitting
disconsolately on garden walls. No problem scoring in Portsmouth.
It was Oblivion-on-Sea.
I kept answering the phone to someone named Carl, who
needed to talk to Miranda about business. She’d always take the
calls upstairs in the bedroom. As I put down the receiver I’d hear
her greet him, an unfamiliar warmth in her voice, a breathiness.
Was he her lover? It wouldn’t have surprised me. There were so
many secrets between us that one more wouldn’t really have
made a di,erence. I felt happy for her: she deserved someone
who could share her ambitions, her hopes for the future. She
certainly deserved better than me. Yet this new mystery, this sense
of possibilities away from our shared life, suddenly made her
seem desirable again. It was like some bad behaviorist joke: me
in the dunce’s cap, salivating on cue. I found myself watching
her as she dressed to go to the o/ce, her trim bottom wiggling
into a pencil skirt, the nape of her neck as she twisted sideways
to brush her hair.
One evening I was in the living room, half watching Pat Ellis
on the news. I had a bottle in front of me on the co,ee table, a
Portuguese red that I was trying to make last. Miranda came in
and sat down beside me on the sofa.
“Want one?” I asked, trying to sound playful.
She shrugged. “Why not?”
“Really?”
She nodded. I muted the TV and went to fetch her a glass. She
took a couple of sips and set it down on the co,ee table. She looked
very tired. A sudden deep silence fell between us, a mutual ease I
didn’t want to break.
“How was London?”
“Fine. Busy.”
“I can’t remember who you were meeting.”
“No reason for you to remember. Someone was showing me
retail units.”
“Retail?”
“I haven’t decided yet, but I think we’ll open a little boutique.
Somewhere to showcase the new range.”
“That’s a big step.”
“Not so big. Not since the investors came on board.”
“Where would it be?”
“I was thinking King’s Road, but Carl says Notting Hill would
be better.”
“So was it Carl who was showing you the shop?”
“Carl Palmer. I’ve told you about him.”
“No, I don’t think so.”
“He’s in property. He’s been very helpful.”
“He rings here a lot, your Carl Palmer.”
She looked de-ant. “Does he?”
I held up my hands. “Forget it. Sorry.”
Anger and hopelessness played over her face. She took a deliberate gulp of her wine. “We’ve got a lot to sort out, Mike. But let’s
not get into accusations. Not when we’re actually having a nice
time.”
“You’re right.”
“Look, why don’t we go out for once? I feel like I’m su,ocating.”
We drove to a Greek restaurant where we treated each other
with such care and formality that we eventually made ourselves
laugh. Carl Palmer was with us at the table, .oating beside Anna
Addison, balancing her, giving our conversation the brittle lightness
that comes when two people are colluding with each other, working
hard on the deferral of pain.
The next morning we woke up wrapped round each other in
bed. Miranda smiled at me warily. We had a truce. It was soon
afterward that she -rst mentioned the idea of a birthday party.
October from the study window: Miranda brutally stabbing at
the garden with a trowel. February brought her a reward of
da,odils, great clumps of them lining the beds, paper-white and
sunshine-yellow. I spent hours at my desk, the desk I didn’t use
for anything anymore, watching them quiver in the rain. In the
evenings I followed Pat Ellis on the news. There she was, nine
months into the new era, standing beside her leader wearing a
scarlet jacket and an optimistic smile, like some kind of political
redcoat. There she was, surrounded by hand-picked representatives of the topic of the day, addressing the concerns of Junior
Police O/cers or Minority Community Representatives or Victims
of Antisocial Behavior. Whatever her gang was up to, she was
right in the middle of it, retailing euphoria, glad-handing rock
stars.
When the telly started spewing pictures of fox hunters pushing
policemen in Parliament Square, I laughed so hard I almost fell o,
the couch. Oh, I was living in a topsy-turvy world all right, a mirror
world of .ash and spin and graphic design. Politics was just lifestyle.
Even the scandals seemed to be about home improvement. Miles’s
taunt came back to me: yes, this was the opposite of carving out
a Utopia, the opposite of whatever I’d been fumbling for all those
years ago. Thoroughly pragmatic, blandly ruthless, always up for
a cocktail party. The bloody prime minister was -ve years younger
than me, whichever birthday I counted from.
Then the Home Secretary got himself in a pickle over immigration and the pundits started mentioning Pat Ellis as the coming
woman. One day I was half listening to the radio at God’s, watching
that rare thing, an actual customer, scanning the poetry section,
when I realized Pat was talking in my ear. It had long been her
belief, it transpired, that the end of the Cold War necessitated a
change of focus in Britain’s intelligence services. She buried it in
jargon, smoothing the edges with euphemism and talking with
great seriousness about people tra/cking and animal rights activists and other contemporary threats to state security, but the
underlying message was a budget cut, a reduction of in.uence for
the spooks.
People think Fascism doesn’t exist anymore. It’s just a cartoon
perversion, a repertoire of sketch show mannerisms: uniform
fetishism, short hair, lining your pencils up in a row on your desk.
But the Fascists didn’t go away after the Second World War. I don’t
just mean skinheads, though even they’ve burrowed underground,
talking about multiculturalism, dressing like breakfast-television
presenters. There’s always been a part of the British establishment
that identi-es its own interests with the interests of the state.
They’re unsentimental about human life. They have creatures like
Miles to do their bidding.
Whoever Miles represented, whichever clique or tendency or
faction, I knew that to them, someone like Pat Ellis was just a
blow-in, a temporary occupant of a chair. They wouldn’t hesitate
to remove her if they thought she was a threat. The only question
was whether they took her speech seriously.
Back in , the defenders of British liberty didn’t bother to
camou.age themselves. As union unrest grew and middle-class
leftists talked about revolution around Hampstead supper tables,
there were rumors of an imminent military coup. In Northern
Ireland, young men and boys were being rounded up and placed
in camps. Detainees spent hours or days hooded and shackled in
stress positions while loudspeakers played white noise into their
cells. There were stories of mock execution, prisoners forced to
run gauntlets of baton-wielding soldiers.
In a peculiar way, I felt relieved by the news from Ireland. Internment con-rmed what I’d always felt was true: inside the democratic
velvet glove there was an iron -st. To the imperial dreamers who
still ran our country, this was just another colonial police action,
rounding up a few natives to keep the rest in line. To us it looked
like the beginning of the slide toward the gas chamber.
Sean’s anger knew no bounds. He wanted to act as soon as he
heard the news and it was all I could do to stop him from walking
out of the door, looking for someone to shoot. He talked about
kidnapping, about bombs under cars. He’d always been volatile,
but since the debacle of the bank raid, his anger had grown uncontrollable, bitter. He kept talking about how he’d failed to “save”
Ferdy, how he should have -red. With Anna away there was no
one to counterbalance his self-disgust. He barely listened to the
rest of us, even Claire, who could sometimes talk him down.
Strangely, for someone who seemed to have trouble concentrating
and whose consumption of amphetamines meant that he sometimes went several nights without sleep, he’d taken to reading. He
attacked books; after he’d been at one it would look as if it had
been through a storm, brutally battered, whole pages underlined
in thick pen strokes. To everyone’s annoyance he’d scrawled a quote
from Mao on the wall of the room where he was sleeping. We are
advocates of the abolition of war. We do not want war; but war can only
be abolished through war, and in order to get rid of the gun, it is necessary
to take up the gun. It was Sean’s old favorite line; I didn’t like to think
of it running round his head when he was wired, late at night.
The problem was that there was very little we could do. We’d
almost used up the explosives we’d stolen from the demolition
contractor. The rest of our arsenal consisted of three pistols and
an old Sten gun, which was so rusty I doubted it could be -red.
Thankfully, the plan we came up with was simple, if risky, and
the only casualty had been dead for three hundred years. Late at
night, with Sean behind him, Leo drove a motorbike into Parliament Square. While he pretended to break down, Sean ran into
the darkness and planted a bomb on a short fuse beneath the statue
of Oliver Cromwell that stood outside the Palace of Westminster.
As they accelerated away down the Embankment, the explosion
blew the old butcher into little pieces there is no point
trying to explain right and wrong to cowards and
crooks and part-timers we are sick of justifying
ourselves to you our so-called masters or to you
liberal dilettante scum who wring your hands and
say oh no not this way not now not yet not ever
if it was up to you not while british troops are
setting up concentration camps in ireland three
hundred years after cromwells army raped and pillaged
across Two days later the inspector from the bomb squad came
on the TV to announce he’d made arrests in connection with the
so-called “ August” group. We saw blurry photographs of people
we’d never heard of, who were described as dangerous seditionaries.
The policeman was con-dent their “dangerous antics” had now
been brought to an end we are talking to those of you
who get it already who are sick of the endless talk
which never brings anything into reality we are
talking to those of you who know we are all in
prison and want to break out go and explain to the
people it is time to put an end to the pig state
they have looked their whole lives into the lying
eyes of judges and social workers and managers and
teachers and foremen and doctors and local councillors and still the only ones they fear are the
police WE ARE EVERYWHERE we are the man standing
next to you on the station platform the woman
cleaning your kitchen floor. I tried to speak to Anna. I had
to leave a coded message with a contact in Paris, who called back
several days later asking me to wait beside a telephone at a certain
time. Since I was staying in a .at with no phone, I’d persuaded a
friend to let me use hers. This friend, a girl I knew from Notting
Hill, had no idea I was involved in anything illegal. When Anna’s
call came through she was in her living room, drinking and playing
records with some friends. I sat on her bedroom .oor in a tangle of
tights and paperbacks and ashtrays and listened to the party on the
other side of the door and the crackle on the line and an operator’s
voice speaking in a language I thought must be Arabic and then
came Anna’s voice, cosmically distant, saying, “Hello.” Our conversation was stilted and telegraphic. I didn’t want to risk discussing
Sean. I asked how she was and she said she was -ne. There was a
long pause, then she asked if Grandma was all right, our code for
an emergency. I didn’t dare say that my main reason for calling was
to hear her voice. I pretended to have a logistical question, a query
about a vehicle we’d left in the long-term parking lot at Heathrow
airport. I didn’t ask where she was. I knew it wasn’t France.
Three weeks later. An indeterminate landscape, neither land nor
sea; the light a uniform gray dazzle. I drove a brand new VW
camper van over endless mud.ats, the only sign of my passing a
pair of tire tracks, abstract lines in the rearview mirror. It was
impossible to tell where the sky began.
I was still on the German side of the border. Up the coast a mile
or two was Denmark. The Holstein marshes appeared primeval,
almost empty of human life. Up ahead the mud.ats folded themselves into low dunes crested with gray-green sea grass. Huge .ocks
of migratory birds wheeled overhead.
There it was, the place I was looking for—a boathouse with a
red roof. I drew up, parked beside it on a patch of broken concrete,
listened into the wind. A series of mu0ed stuttering reports.
Silence, then the same sound again. Short bursts of automaticweapon -re, coming from some distance away. I got out and walked
round the boathouse, rattling the big double doors, trying to see
in through the smeared glass of the windows. Mu0ed as it was,
the sound put me on edge. An animal reaction. Fight or .ight. As
I looked round, someone grabbed me from behind, pinning my
arms to my sides. I struggled and found myself face to face with
Sean, who seemed to -nd my violent thrashing very funny. When
I shook him o,, he raised his hands in pretend surrender.
“Hold on there, cowboy. I saw you drive up. I came to -nd
you.”
“Get o,. Get the fuck away from me.”
“Calm down, amigo. Bad journey?”
“It was OK.”
“We’re over in the dunes, shooting targets.”
I’d followed Anna’s instructions. A Middle Eastern man in a café
on Edgware Road. An envelope of money. I’d bought the van, taken
it to be modi-ed. Now there were secret compartments behind
the door panels and between the front and rear axles, ready to
transport the equipment back to the U.K. We’d all made our way
to the marshes in ones and twos, disguised as tourists exploring
the national park. As money was no longer a problem I’d bought
myself new camping equipment, an expensive tent and sleeping
bag. I told Sean I’d follow on and pitched it some distance away
from the boathouse. I wanted to wake up in the morning and see
the horizon. I wanted to watch the .ight of the birds.
For that week we knew each other only by single names. The
instructors were Khaled and Johnny. There were the Germans,
Jochen, Conny, Frank, and Julia. Paul, I think, was French. Some
had been in southern Lebanon, training in a PFLP camp. For others,
like me, this was the -rst contact with what Khaled called “the
organization.” I watched Anna skillfully stripping and rebuilding a
.6 mm Skorpion machine pistol. She demonstrated how to reduce
the rate of -re, how the stock folded so it could be carried under
a jacket or a coat. Khaled stood beside her, nodding approvingly,
his eyes fading from view behind his Polaroid sunglasses whenever
the sun emerged from behind a cloud.
A gun, an animal weight in my hands, warm and snakily alive.
Anna repeating Arabic words from a phrasebook. Johnny picking
his way over the dunes, the sand -lling his city shoes. No one
disturbed us. No one came. In the evenings, after the light had
failed and we’d eaten a tasteless meal of canned soup and bread,
discussions were held in the dank boathouse. Ideas were debated
in a patchwork of languages. Plans were formed. People spoke
of a strategy for victory. They spoke about the end of Imperialism.
They could have been talking about anything. Road resurfacing,
waste disposal. Out in the marshes, I thought. We’re out in the
marshes at the edge of the sea, miles from the nearest other
human beings, talking about who we’re going to kill to demonstrate our organic connection to the masses. I’d light my way
back to my tent with a little pocket flashlight, a bright speck in
the enormous darkness.
Johnny and Khaled never let us forget where the money came
from, whose agenda took priority. Whatever we’d been doing
before, whichever acronymic jumble of letters represented our
particular hopes, we were now part of something much larger
than ourselves, an international network with nodes in Frankfurt,
Milan, Beirut, Bilbao. They talked about targets in London, people
and places that had no connection with anything I cared about.
They talked obsessively about Zionism. The weapons were new,
some of them still in their packing grease. They were all of
Eastern-bloc manufacture: Makarovs and Tokarevs, the Czech
Skorpion machine pistols. This should have told us all we needed
to know. We weren’t autonomous anymore. Far from it. Yet none
of the others, these people I knew as Sean and Leo and Anna and
Jay and Claire but who now had other names, seemed to want to
be reminded of the way we’d talked to one another only a few
months previously, how we’d intended to escape the binary
madness of East and West, how we respected human life. Armed
love, we’d said. In order to get rid of the gun it is necessary to
take up the gun. I -red o, rounds into a paper target, and with
each bullet I believed a little less. Quietly, privately, I began to
wonder how I could get away.
Oh, Sam. It was arrogance, I suppose. We thought we’d stepped
outside. We thought it had been given to us to kick-start the new
world. Can you understand that? Does wanting to be a corporate
lawyer count as a dream? For the -rst time in many years I celebrated my birthday, Chris Carver’s birthday, a few weeks before
that of Michael Frame. I sat in the study with an expensive bottle
of Burgundy and looked back at my -fty years and felt so fucking
disappointed, Sam. I knew I needed to speak to you, to prepare
you, however imperfectly, for what was about to happen. That was
just last week, when I drove to Bristol to see you. You were shocked
to -nd me on your doorstep. You opened the door a crack, your
hair a mess, a sheet wrapped round your middle. It was past twelve.
I could hear someone coughing in the background. You left the
boy in your bed and made me co,ee in the shared kitchen, shu0ing
past your neighbors as they boiled pasta and opened cans to make
a sauce.
“What are you doing here, Dad?” As if I were a visitor from
outer space, bug-eyed and slightly disgusting, come to earth to
rupture your reality. I told you I needed to talk and you said you
had a lecture. Couldn’t I have rung -rst? I o,ered to occupy myself
for an hour or two, meet you afterward. I wandered round Clifton
and, when you’d gotten yourself together, took you to lunch at a
fancy French restaurant where I encouraged you to overorder and
.ourished the wine list and generally faked my way through the
part of the jovial father who’d come down to uni to give his
daughter a surprise. I tried to get you to eat. You just pushed your
food around on your plate. You looked thin and I said so, and
immediately you .ew o, the handle, telling me to mind my own
business. That sort of remark was typical of me. It was typical of
men. I asked what you meant and you raised your voice and
demanded to know why it was that, unless you were totally stu/ng
yourself, men were always, like, were you some kind of anorexic.
You used the word fucking. Miranda never liked you to swear. What,
you asked, was I doing in Bristol anyway?
I told you there was something you needed to know about, and
you immediately asked whether your mum and I were splitting up.
Such a direct question, it threw me. “Of course not,” I said automatically. “No, of course not.” You sat there, your face suspicious
and expectant by turns. I was lost for words. I’d already gone wrong.
You were so volatile, so unexpectedly bitter. In a bid to mark time,
I heard myself say, yet again, that there was something I needed
to discuss. I tried to push myself on by telling you there were things
you and your mum didn’t know about me.
You reacted with hair-trigger hostility. “I knew it. You’re sleeping
around on Mum. You bastard.”
As much as I protested, you wouldn’t listen. You were so absolute, so unwilling to be contradicted. You called me various names
echoing things Miranda must have complained to you about. Why
didn’t I do something with my life? Why did I just mooch o, other
people?
You were impossible, Sam. You wouldn’t let me get a word in.
You’d sensed something and you knew you were at least half right,
which gave you the con-dence, the self-righteousness, to shut me
down completely. Angry and hurt, I called for the bill. We didn’t
part as friends.
Miranda must have forced you to come home for the party. You
didn’t have much to say to me when you arrived that evening, just
dropped your stu, and went out to the pub. Surely you must have
told your mum I’d been to see you. She didn’t bring it up. I decided
she must be holding it in reserve. That was what I was thinking
about when Miles arrived. Was it yesterday? The day before. I was
in the study, watching the men from the marquee company fooling
about on the lawn. I swiveled round on my chair and there he was,
standing in the doorway.
“Hello, Chris. Sorry to call so unexpectedly. Door was open.”
My instinct, as ever, was to get him out of the house, so we
walked into town and sat in a café, some hideous chain operation
with prosthetic-pink iced buns lying like hospital patients under
the glass of the counter and a bedraggled Eastern European girl
making co,ee that tasted of dishwashing liquid. “Will that be
everything for you today?” she said mechanically, as we lined up
to pay. “Would you like to add an extra shot or a .avor for only
-fty p?”
We sat in the window. Miles performed his usual fussy sittingdown routine, -ddling with his trouser legs and smoothing
his jacket under his bottom. For a while he rambled on about his
chiropractor. Miracle worker, reasonable rates. Another carry-over
from the old days. Miles always had an air of slight distraction, a
vagueness that made it hard to tell where his attention was
directed.
“I’m sorry, Chris,” he said eventually, with the compassionate
expression of a doctor about to tell the patient his cancer had
metastasized.
“What exactly are you sorry about?”
“In life, I always say, you start o, somewhere and you end up
somewhere, but the trouble is you don’t begin with a clean slate. I
think that’s what we were after. A clean slate. Not much to ask, you
would have thought. Take me, for instance. I realize everyone thought
I had it very easy. Well, I didn’t. My life wasn’t simple at all.”
“Is that so?”
“You sound skeptical.”
“You seemed to be able to do what you wanted. You drifted
around, made your -lms. You always had money.”
“Money wasn’t really the issue.” He leaned back in his chair and
stretched. I heard the joints in his arms and back make an unpleasant
gristly sound. “I was doing my best to look free. It was the fashion,
wasn’t it? You had to look free. And sincere! You had to be so
crushingly sincere all the time! God help you if you weren’t.
Everyone jumped down your throat.”
“What do you want, Miles? I need to get back.”
He ignored me, -xated on his train of thought. “I’ve given it a
lot of input over the years and now I understand why everyone
was so bloody boring. I think deep down we all knew we were
doomed to be terribly disappointed, but we hated anyone bringing
it up. If you brought it up, it messed with everyone’s vibe.”
“Who’s this ‘we’ you keep talking about? I hardly knew you.”
“Do you remember the time we met in Wales?”
“Yes.”
“You were in too deep, by then. I could tell you were.”
That was true enough. I’d started to get eczema on my eyelids
and on the backs of my hands. Whole days went by when I couldn’t
get out of bed. At other times I was possessed by an intense, restless
energy. From the .at in Camden Town, I started to take long walks
by the canal, picking my way along the towpath toward the rubble
of the docklands, or into the West End, where I’d wander around
staring at the bustling world as if it were behind glass, an expensive
window display arranged for someone else’s bene-t, not mine.
After I got back from the training camp, I couldn’t see what the
future held. I felt like I’d cut myself o, from everything meaningful.
Other groups were continuing the political work we’d once done;
they were still connected to the struggle, to something wider than
themselves. Once I’d been surrounded by people. Where had they
all gone?
One afternoon, as I was bustling purposelessly toward Camden
Lock, someone called out to me. I didn’t respond at -rst, but
-nally, after my name was shouted a second and a third time, I
turned round and saw a girl I knew from Free Pictures. Alison
had curly dark hair and a broad, gentle smile; I hadn’t seen her
since the last chaotic party at Lansdowne Road, during which, for
an hour or two, I’d hoped we might go home together. She greeted
me with a hug and asked what I’d been doing. I gave some
noncommittal answer. She seemed almost absurdly excited and
carefree, as if she were the inhabitant of a parallel world where
young people were allowed to drift around on September afternoons without worrying about raids and explosives and surveillance
and the secret state. She was living nearby. And me? “Round
about,” I said. “Staying with friends.” Why hadn’t she seen me? I
shrugged. She gave me an appraising look. Then, as if struck by
a sudden inspiration, she asked if I wanted to go to Wales with
her and her friends. Right then, that afternoon. There was a free
festival. There was space in the van.
I said yes instinctively, without thinking.
As I was driven out of London in someone’s beaten-up Bedford,
I started to think of all the reasons I shouldn’t be going. The breach
of security; the breach of discipline. But no one else had been in
the .at where I was staying so there’d been no one to question
me.
There were six of us. Though the others were all my age, they
seemed incredibly young. The boys showed o,, telling jokes and
trying to impress each other. The girls giggled and rolled their eyes
at Alison, who let them know I was her property, nestling herself
beside me in the back and chattering away about things that seemed
utterly foreign: the names of bands, the hassles of her part-time
job.
By the time we reached the Welsh borders, a light rain had set
in and the atmosphere in the van became more subdued. At last,
after many hours’ driving, we found ourselves crawling through
tiny lanes in a remote spot on the Caernarfonshire coast, looking
for the festival site. We found it by following a London taxi painted
with Day-Glo orange and yellow swirls, which led us to a muddy
patch of farmland by a river, set in a beautiful bowl of forested
hills. The festival wasn’t a huge event. The organizers had erected
a small stage and a few hundred people had set up camp on the
soggy land around it, a scattering of tents and trucks and tepees
that looked like some sort of tribal encampment.
Ragged people moved through the forest foraging for -rewood.
Some had built shelters among the trees out of tarpaulins and
artfully interwoven branches. As we pitched tents there was a
moment of awkwardness until Alison made it clear I’d be staying
with her. We went over to hear some music, stretching out on a
rug listening to a group featuring a .autist who traded licks with
a sitar, while their singer rhymed getting straight with meditate.
Lying down beside Alison, I let the sound wash over me. A jazzrock band came on, all complicated ri,age and polyrhythms. A
gnomelike old guy, naked except for a loincloth, performed a
shu0ing shamanic hop at the front of the stage. Alison and I talked,
or rather she talked and I listened, happy to hear her opinions
about books and fashion and -lms. A kitchen was dispensing free
food and as we lined up with our bowls I had to -ght the urge to
cry on her shoulder, to let all my troubles spill out. As night fell,
people lit bon-res and someone passed round a tube of tiny red
stars. As Alison came up on her trip she wanted to have sex but I
couldn’t and felt bad about it, which made her feel bad too. We
stopped trusting each other and she retreated to her friends and
eventually I left the circle of -relight and wandered around in the
dark. Someone was playing a repetitive -gure on an electric guitar,
a jagged rasp that seemed vaguely threatening, like the shadows
that loomed up around me as I stumbled through the damp woods,
shadows that always resolved into the silhouettes of other festivalgoers, lost souls too high and disoriented to get back to their friends.
I fell asleep by someone else’s -re and woke up very early in the
morning to the sound of conversation.
For a long time I didn’t move. I couldn’t feel my arms and legs.
In my confusion I wondered if I’d died. The light was very bright.
A young girl with a disturbingly doll-like face was reaching down
toward me, touching my face. Her blue eyes and white clothing
triggered some Sunday-school routine in my brain: it was only
when I noticed the muddy hem of her dress that I was -nally
convinced she was real.
“You’re very cold,” she said, in a broad Yorkshire accent. I sat
up sti0y, rubbing my eyes. She was right. My back had frozen
into a painful block. She o,ered me a joint, which I waved away.
Then, to my amazement, I noticed Miles Bridgeman sitting next
to her, wrapped in a shaggy Afghan coat. His hair had grown and
he had a full beard, plaited into twin strands held together by little
glass beads.
“Chris?”
“Miles?”
“I couldn’t decide if it was you. Someone had to move you in
case you burned yourself. Man, what are you doing here?”
“I don’t know. I came with some people.”
“You must be cold. Give him a blanket, Milly.”
Milly looked about thirteen, but there was something about the
way she carried herself that made me think she must be a good
deal older. She draped a patchwork quilt over my shoulders, looking
at me incuriously with her ceramic blue eyes. Someone was
building up the -re and within a few minutes I was huddled next
to it, poking my feet as far forward as I could get without melting
the soles of my boots.
“You fought them, you know.”
“What?”
Miles grinned. “The people who tried to move you. You’d passed
out completely, but you woke up and tried to -ght them.”
“Shit.”
“You didn’t hurt anyone.”
I watched Milly make tea and my mind raced as I tried to work
out how much trouble I was in. I didn’t think Alison had any
connection with Miles. I saw no way he could have engineered this
encounter unless Alison had been placed in the street, waiting for
me to go by. But I hadn’t seen him since he was kicked out of
Sylvan Close. I knew I needed to be careful.
“It’s been a long time,” he said. I nodded, looking over his
shoulder to see if I could spot Alison in the crowd. People were
milling about, looking for breakfast, making their way down to
the river to wash.
“You were calling out, too, you know. When they were trying
to move you.”
I must have looked worried, because he held up his hands and
smiled. “Impossible to tell what you were saying. Just noises.”
We sat for a while, poking the -re with sticks. I was beginning
to warm up, to master my shivering.
“What have you been doing?”
“Not much. You know.”
“You’re still in Hackney?”
“I’m staying with friends.”
“I’ve got a houseboat down in Chelsea. Just o, Cheyne Walk.
You should come and take a look at her one day. She’s called the
Martha. You can still see a place on the side where she got hit by
a German shell at Dunkirk.”
“Very patriotic.”
“Goodness. Dirty words, coming from you.”
Milly made beans on toast, which I ate gratefully, the reviving
warmth of the food doing what the -re hadn’t quite managed.
“Very bad about Northern Ireland,” said Miles, as I scraped the
plate with the side of my fork.
“Let’s not discuss politics. Not today.”
“That’s unlike you.”
“What?”
“Not to want to talk politics.”
“I feel like shit, Miles.”
“Of course. Sorry. How’s Anna?”
“She’s -ne.”
“So you’re still in touch?”
I was too tired to lie. “Sure.”
“And Sean? I haven’t seen him around.”
“Why would you? You’re not exactly his favorite person.”
“I suppose you’re right. Good to know you’re all still together,
though.”
There was a massive hinterland to his words, a realm of
insinuation. He reached into a pocket and pulled out a pen and
a little notebook. What kind of person carried a pen at a festival?
He scribbled something down, tore out the sheet and handed it
to me.
“Take this, while I remember.”
“What is it?”
“My address. The boat. I’ve put my phone number on it.”
“Thanks.”
“You really should come by. I always feel I ought to keep up with
friends a little more than I do. People have missed you, Chris.”
“Oh, yeah? Like who?”
“Me, for one. But there are others. I’ll be honest, people say
things. What with all the raids and everything—well, when heavy
people like you and Sean and Anna drop out of sight—you know.
There’s talk.” He left it hanging in the air. “Chris, whatever you’re
into, you should be careful.”
I stood up and brushed myself down. I was covered with dried
mud and bits of grass. “I should -nd my friend Alison.”
“Really? Perhaps I’ll see you later.”
“Maybe. Do you know her?”
“Alison?”
“Her surname’s Jenner, I think. Dark hair. Used to work at
BIT.”
“No, doesn’t ring a bell.”
“I thought she might be a friend of yours.”
Miles stood up and put his hands on my shoulders. It was an
oddly intimate gesture for such an unphysical, self-contained man.
“If I don’t see you, call me when you get back to London. I mean
it. If you ever need someone to talk to about anything. Anything
at all.”
I waved to Milly, thanking her for the beans in a strained, overcheerful voice. Then I went around the camp, trying not to get
spotted by Alison as I hunted urgently for someone who was driving
back to London. In the end I got a lift with a couple who said they
could take me as far as Reading. I got into the backseat of their
old Hillman Avenger and was halfway to Bristol before I realized
I’d left my sleeping bag in Alison’s tent.
Miles remembered the festival as a bucolic moment, a highlight
of our shared youth. It was evidence, he told me, that we’d once
been friends. He hoped that even if I felt angry now, I appreciated
that he’d acted in as decent a way as possible.
“Unfortunately,” he said, in a tone of in-nite resignation, “Mrs.
Ellis is being pigheaded. It was put to her that now might be an
appropriate moment to step down from frontline politics and do
something more suitable.”
“What does suitable mean?”
“Voluntary sector. Academia. The places they keep the more
intractable old lefties.”
“And she refused.”
“Sadly.”
“Because your insinuations aren’t true.”
“Yes, they are.”
“Who says?”
“You do.”
I watched the shoppers trudging past the café window.
“You’re an evil bastard.”
Miles sighed. “Chris, I’m not doing this to be vindictive. In fact,
you shouldn’t go away with the impression that I give a damn one
way or the other, because quite frankly I don’t. I don’t care what
you did thirty years ago, or what Pat Ellis did. Believe me, I’d rather
be doing anything with my day but this. I realize how it’s going to
disrupt your life, but it’s unavoidable. You’ll be in the spotlight for
a while, which is also unavoidable. The thing to remember is that
it’ll only be for a short time, the exposure. They get bored. It stops.
And you won’t be on your own while it’s happening. We’ll help
you through. You’ve had a good run, but it’s over. You have to
understand that.”
“I’m not doing anything for you.”
“Chris, I’m sorry. But it’ll be a lot better if we do it my way.
The other way you wouldn’t like. It’s time to come out of hiding.
It’s time to tell your story.”
I asked him if he wanted another co,ee. He shook his head.
“So,” I asked wearily, “what are you proposing?”
“You’ll give an interview to a journalist, a man called Gibbs.
He’s someone I’ve worked with before. Very reliable. An arsehole,
of course, all those guys are, but he’s not unpleasantly rabid. In it,
you’ll describe your remorse for your actions, your secret double
life and so forth. Your “explosive revelation”—as their headline
writer will no doubt dub it—is the fact that a serving government
minister was present during the manufacture of the Post O/ce
Tower bomb. You’ll throw yourself on the mercy of the British
justice system. You’ll be given the opportunity to remind readers
how young you were. In return, I’ll try to minimize the legal
consequences. It’s not something I’ll be able to control entirely, but
I promise I’ll give it my best. Have you told your wife yet?”
“No.”
“I think it’s time you did.”
“Don’t fucking tell me what it is or isn’t time to do. It’s my life.
My life, Miles. We’ve been together sixteen years. What do I have
other than her and Sam? Fuck all, that’s what. They’re my life and
the person who has that life is Mike Frame.”
He slammed his palm down on the table, making the co,ee cups
rattle. He looked exasperated. “God, you make it fucking di/cult,
don’t you? Think! Use your head! You don’t have a choice about
whether this is coming out. One way or the other it’s going to
happen. Your only choice is how it comes out. I’m asking you
to think of your family. Make it easy for them, if you can’t for
yourself.”
We’d been raising our voices. The girl behind the counter was
glancing around nervously, as if wondering whether she’d have to
intervene.
“I’m going now.” I got up and walked out, cutting across the
street and weaving through the Saturday shopping crowds. I didn’t
look behind but I knew Miles was following me. I could hear the
sharp reports of his shoes on the .agstones. Metal heel protectors.
What did we call them when I was a kid? Blakeys. He was wearing
blakeys.
“Chris, stop.”
“Mike. I’m Mike, all right? Michael Frame.”
“It’s over, Chris. All that’s over. I told you Pat Ellis has decided
to -ght. Apparently she’s contacted the police about you. She’s
made it o/cial, so that if she’s challenged she can say she took
immediate action. They’re circulating your old pictures.”
***
Shoot the messenger. That was it, partly. But there was also a
deeper question, one of trust. I didn’t blame them for their paranoia. I’d have been just as suspicious. I was cadre. I was supposed
to be disciplined. Without warning I’d disappeared for a weekend,
gone completely o, the map. Then I’d come back with a story
about Wales and Miles Bridgeman, who everyone already suspected
was an informer. It was never going to look right.
There was a meeting. Hostile faces, searching looks. I was left in
a room on my own and when they came back, they told me—or,
rather, Anna told me, using her coldest and most impersonal tone—
that Leo and Jay would take the train with me to Manchester, where
we had a .at we’d kept empty for emergencies. We should phone
in every day. We should wait for instructions.
Whether or not I’d been believed, my news precipitated a group
transformation, a sudden shedding of skin. For some time we’d
been laying paper trails around our new identities, breathing life
into birth certi-cates and library cards and utility bills and fake
letters of reference. We’d all practiced changing our appearance.
It was time to break with the past, to go completely underground.
From that day on my name was Michael Frame. I practiced it.
If Michael Frame was walking down the street and someone called
out, he should turn round instantly, without hesitating. Michael
Frame had short hair and a neatly trimmed moustache. He had no
connection with politics of any kind. I rehearsed the names of his
mother and father, his date of birth.
On the journey north, Leo and Jay behaved more like guards than
comrades. I couldn’t buy a newspaper at a kiosk or walk through
the train to the bu,et car without one of them accompanying me.
We didn’t talk much. They both had trouble meeting my eye. I knew
Leo was armed and that made me afraid.
The Manchester .at was on the sixteenth .oor of a system-built
block in Rusholme. It was almost bare of furniture, just a couple
of mattresses and a little black-and-white telly balanced on an
orange crate by the heater. We stayed there for almost two weeks,
playing cards, smoking endless cigarettes. The weather was -lthy.
Wind drove dirty sleet against the windows. Once in a while the
sun appeared, a bilious pale yellow ball like the yolk of a battery
farm egg. If it hung around for more than an hour or two in the
morning, it turned the treacherous -lm of ice on the pavement
into a nasty gray slush.
A strike was on, so there were power cuts. When night fell, its
reign was absolute. In the stairwell of Arkwright House, bobbing
flashlight beams; dishes of melted candlewax on the kitchen
counter. Sixteen .oors up and the elevators didn’t work. Sixteen
.oors with crappy plastic shopping bags, which sagged and tore,
sending cans and bottles crashing down the hard steps. When the
wind was strong, rushing through the gaps between Arkwright
and Stephenson and Cobden, the three towers groaned in pain.
One evening as I climbed the stairs with Jay, my pocket flashlight
lit up an old man clinging to the handrail. He was like a ghost
from the industrial past: .at cap, scarf knotted round his neck, his
jacket unbuttoned to reveal a woollen undershirt tucked into a pair
of greasy trousers. He was in a bad way, breathing heavily, the
sweat pouring down his unshaven cheeks. When I asked if he was
all right he mutely shook his head. “It’s Mary,” he said, expelling
the words with great e,ort, through a curtain of phlegm.
George was probably in his sixties but work had aged him
brutally, scooping out his face and clogging his lungs with cotton
dust. In August his wife had slipped and fallen; now she was too
frail to leave the .at. For the last couple of days she hadn’t stopped
shivering, so he’d put on his shoes and gone downstairs to fetch a
doctor. It had taken him the best part of an hour to make it as far
as the seventh .oor. We sat with him for a while, and when we
realized his asthma wasn’t getting any better, Jay went back down
to the pay phones in the hall to call an ambulance. Half an hour,
they said. They’d had a lot of calls. I told George they were on
their way and went to check on his wife.
“Don’t frighten her,” he pleaded. “Sing out before you go in,
else she’ll think you’re a burglar.”
Up on the fourteenth .oor, I knocked on the door and called
through the letterbox. George couldn’t remember if he’d locked
up so he’d given me his key. Still calling out, I went inside. The
.at smelled of bacon fat and was as cold as a tomb. The flashlight
picked up patches of damp, a shelf of dusty china birds, an armchair
with a stack of Reader’s Digest magazines balanced on a footstool
beside it. I found Mary bundled up in bed, her eyes shut and her
mouth hanging open, a little gray-faced -gure with a tuft of thin
hair plastered across her scalp. The bedroom stank of stale urine.
I wondered if she was already dead.
“Mary, I’m a neighbor. George sent me to see how you were.”
She moaned. I couldn’t tell if she was aware of me, but at least
she was alive. My foot hit an over.owing chamber pot, sitting out
on the rug by the bed; I tried to master an overpowering sense of
disgust. How had they been left like this? Who was supposed to
be looking after them? Eventually the ambulance men came; Jay
and I made ourselves scarce. We stood on the landing, just out of
sight, listening to them cursing and swearing as they carried Mary
down the stairs. I expect it was the smell, rather than the weight.
She must have been as light as a bird.
The next day I took George a bag of necessities: candles, toilet
paper, cans of food. He was too proud to admit it, but there were
obviously days when he and Mary ate nothing at all, when their
pension money had run out or they hadn’t been able to make it
to the shops. I sat in the armchair and he shu0ed around, making
a slow motion cup of tea. I listened to his labored breathing, the
squeak of his cane on the kitchen linoleum. It made me feel
ordinary, human. I remember it as the one decent moment of
my time in Manchester.
When I went back upstairs after taking George his food, Leo
thrust a newspaper into my hand. Across the front page was
splashed the story that a bomb had blown up part of the employment secretary’s constituency home. A communiqué had been
received from the bombers, which hadn’t been reproduced.
“Was that us?” I asked. Leo nodded.
“Anyone hurt?”
“No, not that it says.”
“Why wasn’t I told?”
He shrugged. “Because you’re a security risk,” he said .atly.
At last, to my face. I tried to make a joke of it. “What are you
going to do, Leo, put me on trial? A people’s court? March me into
the woods and shoot me in the back of the head?”
I wanted him to laugh. He didn’t laugh. He told me to use his
other name. Paul. I was to call him Paul Collins.
“Since when,” I asked, “are we bombing people’s houses? Did
we know nobody was in there?”
“A risk assessment was made.”
“A risk assessment was made. You know what’s going to happen,
don’t you, Leo? Someone’s going to get killed.”
Again he shrugged, the same petulant, noncommittal shrug.
“Collateral damage,” he said. “It’s inevitable in war.”
“You sound like General Westmoreland.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“Callous, Leo. You sound callous.”
“Human being or pig. You make your choice.”
“So there’s nothing in between?”
“No.”
“And the pigs have to die?”
He didn’t reply, just stared at me angrily.
I gave him a slow round of applause. “Well, good for you, mate.
That’s the kind of commitment I like.”
He chose to ignore my sarcasm. “Sean’s coming later. You can
have it out with him.”
Soon enough came the death-rattle buzz of the doorbell. Sean
wore a new gray suit and a hungry look. He was carrying, of all
things, a leather attaché case, the kind with a combination lock
and fancy metal clasps. He loped into the .at and -lled the living
room with misdirected energy. “Hello, Mike,” he said.
I laughed involuntarily. I couldn’t get used to the name. “Christ,
Sean, there’s no one but us here.”
“Dennis Kilfoyle,” he said sharply. “Dennis.” The case dangled
awkwardly from his arm. It was the oddest thing for him to carry.
Its e,ect was to render the rest of the disguise theatrical; the suit,
the club tie, the badly shaved chin.
He walked past me into the bedroom, picking his way over the
mess. As we had no table, we’d taken to eating our meals standing
at the kitchen counter or sprawled on the living-room carpet, which
was now pocked with stains and cigarette burns. I asked Sean if
he wanted to go out and eat.
“No time,” he said. “I’m here to drive you all to a meeting.”
I took this in. “When?”
“Tonight. Now. You should get some things together.”
I found a sports bag and started stu/ng dirty clothes into it.
Sean lit a cigarette, turned over one of the books lying on the .oor.
The sky was a black square in the curtainless window.
“So, how have things been?” I asked.
“We’re making progress.”
I waited for more. The silence spooled out like thread.
“You ready?” he asked eventually. I nodded. He was all business,
ostentatiously checking his watch. Sean Ward, wearing a watch.
We walked through the piss stink of the lobby and into the nighttime drizzle. Outside Arkwright House was parked a brand new
Mercedes. He motioned me to get in.
“You’re going up in the world,” I noted.
“It’s a company car.”
All four of us broke into nervous laughter.
Sean drove out of the city, heading into the Peak District. It was
drizzling and he was driving fast, too fast, as it turned out, for the
tra/c police. Flashing blue lights appeared in the rear window.
Under his breath, Sean swore, shifting around in his seat and loosening his jacket.
“Here,” he said. “Take this.” He handed me a gun.
“What the fuck, Sean?”
“Dennis. It’s fucking Dennis. If he asks me to get out of the car,
you do him. Understand?”
I turned round. In the back, the other two were also readying
weapons. Leo seemed to have one of the machine pistols.
“I’m going to pull over, OK? Everyone set?”
Oh, fuck, I thought. Fuck. Fuck. It seemed as if we sat there for
eternity, hazard lights .ashing, waiting for the tap on the
window.
“Hello, sir? Could I see your driver’s license and the car’s log
book, please?”
He was young, a clean pink face peering into the car, shiny with
rainwater. He shined a flashlight over our faces.
“Sorry, O/cer, I don’t have them on me.”
“Your car, is it, sir?”
Stupidity. I tried to transmit it to the policeman by means of
telepathy. Just be stupid, if you’re not already. Be lazy.
Sean grinned. “Like the car?”
“Very nice. Three hundred, is it?”
“That’s right. Six point three liter.”
“Could you just tell me the registration number?”
Sean hesitated. Don’t make me shoot him, I thought. Please
don’t make me fucking shoot him. It was as if I could already feel
it, see it, the bloom of bone and blood, the bullet collapsing the
planes of the young policeman’s face. The silence was too long.
Sean was taking too long. Fuck. Fuck.
Then he reeled it o,. “PWF K.”
The policeman hesitated. Leave it alone, I willed him. Go home
out of the rain.
“Thank you, sir,” he said, after a silence of in-nite weight and
duration. “I’ll let you go now, but you’ll have to produce your documents at a police station within the next -ve days.” He wrote
something in his notebook. “And if you could just watch your speed,
visibility’s not so good tonight. We don’t want any accidents.”
We pulled away and drove for a long time without speaking.
“Is this stolen?” asked Jay.
Sean nodded, -ddling with the radio. “It’s all right. I changed
the plates.”
I exhaled. “And you memorized the new number.”
“What do you think I am? Some kind of cowboy? I’ll have the
gun back now, if you don’t mind.”
We traveled through open countryside, listening to a stream of
crackly pop songs that faded into static as we got up into the hills.
The rain grew heavier, fat drops splashing on the windscreen. The
headlights illuminated stone walls at the shoulder, rabbits scooting
across the road. Finally Sean turned the Mercedes up a track that
ran through a dense pine forest, coming to a halt in front of a rusty
metal gate. I waited in the car as he ran to open it, holding his
jacket over his head as an ine,ectual shield against the water. We
parked in front of an ugly gray stone building built, as far as I could
see in the murk, around a little courtyard. The windows were
covered with sheets of corrugated iron. Half the frontage was
colonized by an enormous black ivy. It was a tumbledown place,
the trees crowding in as if they were trying to reclaim it for the
forest.
Soaked, Sean got back in, his hair plastered to his face.
“Where are we?” I asked.
“Somewhere to keep you on the straight and narrow.”
He bared his teeth mirthlessly, pointing at a weathered wooden
board nailed above the gate.
TOIL HARD
FEAR GOD
BE HONEST
Sometimes I dream about that old workhouse. Its interior was
as stark as the granite façade. Most of the -ttings had been ripped
out, leaving empty bathrooms whose skin of black and white tile
was broken by the silhouettes of missing sinks and toilets, a foulsmelling workshop with painted-out windows and a raised
proctor’s dais at one end. Our people had obviously been staying
there for several days, sleeping on mats in a dusty dormitory that
had a pile of iron bedsteads in one corner. They’d even rigged
up a makeshift kitchen, with a low table of scavenged planks and
a couple of rings running o, bottled gas for cooking. Light came
from oil lamps. A row of plastic buckets stood by a rainwater
butt in the courtyard.
The smells of hash and vegetable stew mingled against a humid
background of rotting wood. We ate, squatting on the .oor by a
heater. I asked Sean what was happening. When was the meeting?
“Tomorrow,” he said. So why had it been so important to drive
two hours through the rain to get here? He shrugged and carried
on spooning stew into his mouth. “We wanted everyone in place,”
he said. I caught an o/cious note in his voice, one of Anna’s
in.ections. Someone handed me a glass of water. People moved
through the room, materializing like wraiths out of the shadows.
Leo’s friend Quinn, a couple of others I didn’t know. No one
introduced me.
“Is Anna all right?” I asked. “Nothing’s happened to Anna?”
“Why do you say that?” asked Sean, sharply. After that no one
made conversation. We just sat there in the half-darkness and
waited.
“Is something about to happen?” I asked.
“Do you think it is?”
I turned round. It was Anna, dressed in jeans and a torn sweater.
Even by the light of the oil lamp I could see how gaunt she was.
Giacometti body, polished-bone head. She looked elevated,
somehow achieved, as if she’d burned some -nal layer of indecision
away from herself.
“Hello, Anna. I was worried about you.”
“No real names, please. Call me Christine, if you must call me
anything.”
It wasn’t just physical, what Anna had erased. She sounded
uncannily detached, as if communicating from a great distance.
“If that’s how you want it.”
“It’s not a question of how I want it.”
“No, of course not. I’m sorry.”
I was beginning to feel uncomfortable; the atmosphere in the
room was a physical weight pressing down on my shoulders.
“Are you expecting someone, Michael? You keep looking over
my shoulder.”
“I can’t see who’s here.”
“Who’s going to come through the door?”
“I don’t know.”
“I’m sure you do. Tell me, what have you been up to?”
“You know what I’ve been up to. Hanging about in
Manchester.”
“Hanging about in Manchester. What else?”
“I don’t understand. Is this the meeting? Are we having the
meeting now? Do you want to discuss targets?”
“I asked a simple question.”
I realized I was at the center of a circle. People sat in the shadows,
smoking, watching. “Are you interrogating me?”
My words dropped thickly o, my tongue. Anna’s face was a
yellow blur. Around it the .ickering light had taken on an involuted
quality; the whole room was pointing toward her face.
“Why do you say that?”
“I’m asking you a question.”
“Who have you been talking to?”
“Is this an interrogation?”
“Tell me who.”
“Nobody.”
“That’s good, Michael.”
Is that what she said? Brie.y, her face looked gentle again. Oh,
Anna, I could have loved you. I could have tried to be perfect. I
listened to myself talking. What had I been talking about? Nothing.
Talking about nothing. Then I realized what was happening and
a tendril of fear crept up into my chest. “Did you spike me?”
I said the words and knew it was true. The dryness in my throat.
The change in the quality of the shadows. My skin was tingling.
My peripheral vision was just a puzzle, a palimpsest of sight.
Suddenly I was very afraid. Please don’t let me be coming up, not
here in this terrible place. But I was. I was coming up. What
was it? The glass of water, brought without me asking. So this was
what it felt like to be a traitor, to be Kavanagh in the woods. Anna
was still talking, asking a stream of questions. God, how much
had they given me? Just out of eyeshot, it was getting busier.
Teeming shadows, a cacophony of vision. The questions became
sharper. It wasn’t just Anna. They were all joining in. Are you sure?
Sure of what? Is there anything you need to tell us? I don’t think so.
Think so or know so? We even had a name for it, a name from
Criticism-Self-Criticism. They were bombing me. They were going
to turn me inside out and pick over my head for the bad bits, like
monkeys smashing a coconut to get at the .esh. How much had
they given me? And why do it there, in that place? I said again, to
them, to myself, that I had nothing to be scared of, nothing
to hide. How much had they given me? Nothing to hide. I was a
good person with nothing to hide. Who do you work for? Good,
Chris. Do you work for Miles? Good, Mike. Who is Miles? Nothing
to hide. And as I tried my best to -ght my fear and answer their
questions, reality slid away until there was no me, just a voice
pleading with other voices. How many voices? Tell us how many other
voices? They seemed to come from all sides asking what are your
real beliefs an impossible question answer a human being for other
human beings that’s no kind of answer a man only one way to free
yourself michael you have to let it go this pretense say what you want
it’s in your head in my head say it down with the pig system this miles
who is he down with the pig system twelve thousand a day what is
what twelve thousand people die every day twelve thousand every day
do you care or do you hate perhaps you’re just a pig who wants a car
holiday color tv no, that’s not it, not it at all come on pig sick pig let
it all go pig sick pig pig pig.
Eventually they must have given me some kind of sedative,
because the next thing I remember is waking in the late afternoon
of the following day to -nd myself curled up in a sleeping bag,
my mouth dry and my head thick and pounding. The world still
wasn’t back to normal. It had an ugly slant to it, a sickening lean.
Anna was kneeling down in front of me. She looked haggard and
exhausted. I saw she had a cold sore on her bottom lip.
“Do you want some tea?”
I propped myself up on one elbow. I felt weak and slightly
nauseous. The tea, which had a lot of sugar in it, tasted good. I
noticed Anna’s hands as she passed it to me. The chewed nails, the
line of black scabs on her knuckles.
“Well done, Mike. I was so worried about you.”
I couldn’t really speak, so I just nodded. She left me alone and
I lay there, trying to piece together what had happened. Another
hour or so passed. I could hear the sound of people moving around
downstairs, birds singing outside the boarded-up window. I think
I fell asleep again.
Later that night, as I lay awake in the dormitory, listening to
people breathe and cough in the darkness, Anna came to crouch
beside me. She smelled of the workhouse, of rotting wood and
long-ago fear. She brought her face close to mine. “It’s good to
have you back,” she whispered, kissing me.
What was this? A reward? Another interrogation? I traced with
my -ngers the winged ridges of her shoulder blades, her ribcage,
and as I touched her I felt a rising tide of horror. “What would
you have done?” I asked.
“What, baby?”
“If you’d found out I was a traitor.”
She tugged her T-shirt over her head. “I’d have killed you,” she
said, lifting her leg to straddle my hips.
***
Slipping on loose gravel, I pick my way up the path to the tower,
which glows inscrutably above me like something from a science
-ction -lm. There’s a cold wind up here on the hill, shuddering
through the bushes, catching at my arms and legs. I sit down
against the tower’s blank stone wall and arrange myself into a
comfortable position, straightening my back and resting my hands
in my lap. There’s nothing I can do now but wait until morning.
Gradually I start to become aware of my breathing. How long
since I last meditated? For years, while I was living at the monastery, I practiced every day. I stopped as soon as I got back to Britain.
The two things were connected, deciding to stop and going home.
I was angry with the monks; that was part of it. I was sick of the
pretense that I’d managed to renounce the world. Wat Tham Nok
was a bustling place, a worldly place, for all the incense and
chanting and sa,ron robes. I think the last straw was the ceremony
the abbot performed to bless a certain Mr. Boonmee’s .eet of
taxis. Boonmee was a gangster, as far as I could see, an oleaginous
man who owned a brothel and a service station and various other
businesses in the nearby town. I remember the gifts piling up, the
vapid grin on Boonmee’s face as he accepted congratulations on
his public act of piety.
After a while, the spotlights switch o,, cutting out with a click
and a soft buzzing exhalation, like a sigh. I’m left in darkness,
breathing in, breathing out. Gradually I’m able to make out the
horizon, the point where the purple-blue sky is cut o, by the denser
black of the hills.
I shut my eyes.
There was to be another action. That was what they told me,
after my interrogation. A job we were to do for Khaled. They laid
out the details. Whether it was come-down or disorientation or
simple shock, I was able to listen and show no emotion at what was
being proposed; my horror existed in a small, locked-away place, far
from the surface. Everyone was very friendly to me. Sean and Leo
in particular went out of their way to be nice. As proof of my
recuperation, I was given an important task. I would meet the PFLP
contact in London and pick up our next tranche of funding.
I drove there overnight with Sean, half listening to his stream of
fractured amphetamine jokes. He dropped me in the West End as
dawn broke, where I hung around for a couple of hours, waiting for
things to open and wishing I didn’t feel so sick. Then I went to meet
the man we knew as Yusef. In a Lebanese café that smelled of rosewater and cigarettes we drank cups of bitter co,ee and I watched
him adjust his tie and run his -ngers over the lapels of his fashionable suit, caressing himself, stealing glances at his re.ection in the
plate glass of the window. He handed me a package containing -ve
thousand pounds. He didn’t seem to notice how my hands were
shaking, the dusting of spilled sugar on the table.
I wasn’t sure before. It was only when I stepped out onto the
pavement that I knew what I was going to do. My Michael Frame
passport was in my pocket. I had a bag full of money. I hailed a
cab and twenty minutes later was standing on Cheyne Walk,
looking at the little village of houseboats moored in front of the
elegant townhouses. Low tide had exposed an oily swathe of black
Thames mud, a cluster of peeling hulls and a wooden gangway
butting up against a .ight of weed-slathered concrete steps. The
Roaring Girl, the Linnet, the Annicka, the Lisboa Princess. Some were
shabby, others spick and span. Here and there were jolly touches:
stripy life preservers, rows of pot plants. One or two boats were
.ying the Union Jack. A Bohemian slovenliness hung over the place,
a mannered slouch.
The Martha was an old tug with a freshly painted nameplate and
a little porch built in front of the wheelhouse. I spotted a patched
section on the side, which I supposed was the shell-hole. The deck
was cluttered with folding chairs and a bicycle was chained to the
gangplank rail. I walked up and knocked on the cabin door. There
was no reply. I knocked harder.
Miles had obviously been asleep. In his ratty check dressing gown
and scu,ed leather slippers, he looked very young, almost like a
schoolboy. “Chris, what are you doing here?”
“I need to talk.”
He frowned. “You’d better come in.”
He made co,ee in the galley and I sat on a stool, wondering
how to start. Miles kept his place very tidy. There were no piles of
books, no dirty laundry on the .oor. Everything was perfectly
presented, from the row of gleaming copper pans hanging over
the stove to the Super camera standing decoratively on a tripod
by the bed.
“I need to tell you something, but before I do, you have to
understand that I don’t want to know what you’ll do with the
information. I don’t want to know anything, Miles, about what you
do or who you are. Do you understand?”
“I think so.”
“After this, you won’t see me again. That’s part of the deal. I
tell you and then I disappear.”
“All right. I’m listening.”
“I’m telling you because it’s gone too far. I can’t justify it, not
what’s being proposed. Not politically—not morally, whatever that
means. I want you to know that I’m not here because I’ve stopped
believing in the need for a revolutionary politics. I haven’t. I’ll always
work toward the revolution. I just need to stop this from happening.”
“I understand.”
And then I told him. The names of the members of our group.
The addresses of our safe houses. I gave him what details I had
of the next action. I told him where to -nd our cache of arms.
At -rst he looked confused. It took him a while to realize what I
was talking about. When he did, he looked ashen. After a while
he began to take notes on a legal pad. When I’d -nished, he
breathed deeply and shook his head.
“And Anna Addison? You haven’t mentioned her.”
“She’s not involved.”
He looked as if he were about to contradict me, then stopped
himself. Lighting a cigarette, he .icked through his notes. “Where
will you go?” he asked.
“It doesn’t matter.” It didn’t. Not then. Not for a long time.
Outside, the tra/c was beginning to build up along the Embankment as commuters made their way to work.
Thirty years later, running down East Street, we were making a
spectacle of ourselves. Two middle-aged men, pink-faced and out of
breath. I slowed down and Miles slumped gratefully against a wall.
Passersby turned round to watch him, this dandyish man sitting on
the concrete. He looked as if he were about to pass out.
“Last chance, Chris,” he choked. “If you walk away from me
again, I’ll make a phone call and the tabloids will be on your doorstep by the end of the day. How do you think it’ll go for you with
them on your back?”
I shrugged.
“I’ll tell you how. The police will be forced to act. There’ll be
an investigation. And—this is what you need to know—if there’s
an investigation they’ll -nd something against you. Do you understand, Chris? If they search they will -nd. And it’ll be serious, we’ll
make sure of that. You’re -fty years old. What age do you think
you’ll be when you get out of prison?”
All the years. All the years, because of conversations with Miles
Bridgeman. It crossed my mind that I could kill him. I could take
him into the park, wring his scrawny neck like a chicken’s. And then
what? Then I’d be running. Did I really have the energy to run?
“And if I cooperate, what happens to Miranda?”
He laughed, standing up and brushing the seat of his trousers.
“She’ll probably get a book deal.”
I pictured Miranda getting over the shock and -nding herself
the center of attention. Miranda doing the rounds of the talk shows,
lunching with journalists from women’s magazines. Miranda blossoming, -nding someone with better hair and teeth to sit beside
her on the interviewer’s sofa.
“You’ll need a lawyer.”
“Oh, of course, a lawyer.”
He was irritated by my sarcasm. “Let’s get out of the street,
shall we? We could at least try to talk like grown-ups.”
We went into the nearest place, a chain pub with blond wood
furniture and a loud jukebox. One window was boarded up,
presumably a souvenir of the previous night’s chucking-out time.
Miles bought beers and I asked him what I hadn’t wanted to ask
all those years previously, on his houseboat.
“Who are you, Miles?”
He pursed his lips in annoyance. “Oh, God, Chris, don’t get
metaphysical. I couldn’t bear it.”
When he spoke again, his voice was weary. “OK. You want my
story? Once upon a time I wasn’t so far away from you, politically.
Not as serious, no, but I did want things to change. Unfortunately
I didn’t have a choice about how I acted. They had me. They had
me from before I -rst met you.”
“What? Recruited over sherry in your tutor’s study? ‘Young
fellow, how would you like to serve your country?’ ”
“Christ, you probably think that’s really how it happens. That’s
the funny thing about you, Chris. After all this—all this madness
you’ve been through—you’re still peculiarly naïve. Amazing, really.
No, I got busted. It was in 66. I knew a man who ran a gallery,
a little place in St. James’s that sold objets d’art. Oriental stu,, mostly.
Pictures and vases, chinoiserie. He o,ered me a job. I’d been at
school with his brother.”
I snorted derisively.
“Well, it turned out the pots and rugs were just a front for other
business. I needed money. I wanted to make -lms. Do you have
any idea how much stock costs? Processing? And it was only hash.
Nothing that was going to do anybody any harm.”
“And you got caught.”
“My employer liked to boast at parties. They arrested me at
Dover, picking up twenty pounds of Nepalese black. We were
shipping it inside brass ornaments. I was terri-ed. I thought I was
going to get ten years. And then some chap in a rumpled suit and
a Balliol tie turned up and told me that if I helped him I might be
able to sort out my problems. Work o, my debt.”
“So you became an informer.”
“That’s more or less it. They were desperate for people who
could -t in. Everyone could always tell a policeman. Hair, shoes—
they stuck out a mile. The bastards kept on at me. They always
had something else for me to do, someone else for me to get to
know. At -rst it was drugs, but pretty soon it was political stu,.
Who was at what meeting. Who knew who.”
“Did they put you in that cell with me?”
He nodded. “God, that was an awful job. All day on that march
I felt like shit. Because I was against the war, you see. I really was.
But each time I tried to drop out they threatened me. And what I
was giving them seemed so innocuous. For Christ’s sake, it was
innocuous. There were all those pseudo Trotskys yabbering away,
but most of them didn’t have a clue. All that revolutionary fervor—
it was a sort of wishful thinking. Oh, I don’t deny there were things
that needed doing—I mean, Britain was a joyless hole of a place
before our generation got hold of it—but no one could see farther
than the end of their noses. We thought it was all about us. Even
Vietnam was about us. And there we were, in the middle of the
Cold War.”
“At least some of us tried to do something. At least we stood
up to them.”
“Can’t you even admit it now? Anything that destabilized the
British state was to the advantage of the USSR.”
He drained the rest of his pint.
“And since then?” I asked. “Did they let you o, the hook?”
“Eventually. But, oddly enough, by that time it had turned into
a career. There was something called the Information Research
Department. A Foreign O/ce setup. They gave me a job in a press
agency. They used it to place things in the newspapers.”
“Disinformation.”
“Propaganda, certainly. Things that made the other side look
bad.”
“So much for wanting the world to change.”
“Oh, and you made the right choices, did you? ‘Trying to do
something.’ You were irrelevant, don’t you get that? History
doesn’t care about what you did. Who’s even heard of you?
Ideology’s dead now. Everyone pretty much agrees on how to
run things. And you know what, Chris? I don’t mind. Let’s all get
on with gardening and watching the soaps and having kids and
going shopping. You’ve done it. You’ve been able to lead a dull
life because there’s no real con.ict anymore. In a couple of years
it’ll be a new millennium and, with luck, nothing will bloody
happen anywhere, nothing at all. That’s what a good society looks
like, Chris. Not perfect. Not -lled with radiant angelic -gures
loving each other. Just mildly bored people, getting by.”
“How the hell do you face yourself in the morning?”
“Don’t patronize me. I don’t see you’ve any call to occupy the
moral high ground.”
“No, I mean it. What’s it like, trying to live like you do?”
“It’s very simple. It’s what most people do. You don’t need to
agree with me. You don’t need to approve of me. But it’s not people
like me who are the problem. All right, let’s say I don’t believe in
anything. Well, one great advantage of that is not wanting to blow
anyone up.”
We sat there in front of our empty glasses.
“So,” he said, “now that we’re actually talking, what about you?
What happened to you after you walked o, the boat that afternoon?”
What happened to me? I did what you did in those days. I got
on a bus. I had a passport and -ve thousand pounds, a huge sum
of money, enough to keep me alive for several years if I lived
cheaply. As far as I was concerned, my life in Britain was over. I
didn’t have any clear intention; I just wanted to move, as quickly
as possible.
So I got on a bus at Victoria station and headed for the Continent. It was the beginning of a period of drifting through Europe
that ended about three months later, in a street in Istanbul. I
remember that time as a .ip-book of cheap hotel rooms, a twoguilder dormitory in Amsterdam, a .ophouse in Naples where you
could hear cockroaches scuttling about on the tiled .oor after they
turned out the lights. At -rst, out of habit, I gravitated toward
places with a counterculture. I sat around on my bedroll in main
squares, listening to long-haired kids playing guitars and hustling
one another for dope. I went to gigs and lost myself in the ampli-ed
darkness, the anonymous strobing of the lights.
I don’t remember much about what I thought or how I felt. I
was treading water, turning round and round, existing rather than
living. I had the idea that I’d try to -nd somewhere very beautiful
and very simple and settle there, far away from all kinds of
violence and destruction. To say I was disillusioned with politics
would be too simple. I still hated the system, hated the cops in
their gray or green or blue or brown uniforms, pushing people
around, moving them on from the Damrak or St. Pauli or the
Strøget. But I didn’t trust myself anymore. I was suspicious of my
instincts, my capacity for violence.
Khaled had ordered us to kill someone. His name was Gertler,
a Jewish businessman who owned a supermarket chain. Gertler’s
crime was Zionism. He donated large sums to right wing political
groups. The British government had given him a knighthood. Every
morning he took his nine-year-old daughter to school, waiting on
the pavement outside his house for the driver to bring his Bentley
round from the mews where it was garaged. The plan was to
ambush him and shoot him dead.
I was confused about many things, but I knew what I thought
about that. Perhaps Khaled and Yusef were justi-ed in -ghting the
enemies of their people. Perhaps, having no army, they had no
alternative but horri-c, spectacular violence. But I couldn’t see how
it was justi-ed for me, who’d never even been to Palestine, to kill
a man out of some abstract sense of revolutionary solidarity or
third world internationalism. No matter how crisply logical the
theory, no matter how tightly one blocked one’s ears to the historical hiss of Zyklon B, on a simple human level Khaled’s plan still
meant killing a man in front of his child and that had nothing to
do with what I believed in. I wanted an end to poverty, to carpet
bombing, to the numbness and corruption of the death-driven
society I’d been born into. Instead it seemed death had corrupted
me too.
Sooner or later, in every city I visited, I’d see someone I thought
I knew. I would hide or walk the other way, but before long I’d
start turning the incident over in my mind and decide they must
have recognized me. I’d feel as if I were being followed. Eventually
I’d pick up my things and run to the railway station, in the grip of
a sweating, heart-racing paranoia.
All that came to a head in Istanbul. The city was seething with
bad vibes. There had recently been a military coup and soldiers
were patrolling the streets, grim men in fatigues who checked papers
and lounged around contemptuously at intersections, watched by
the sullen populace. People were always tugging at my sleeve in the
bazaars, trying to sell me drugs or steer me into their shops. I was
spending most of my days looking for someone to give me a ride
farther east, knocking on doors at my hostel, hanging around
outside a café called the Pudding Shop, which had a traveler’s
noticeboard and a crudely painted mandala on the wall. One afternoon I picked up an eight-week-old copy of The Times, which had
somehow survived, preserved with various other archaeological
relics of the foreign media, on a stall just o, the Grand Bazaar.
TWO DEAD, OTHERS SOUGHT AFTER LONDON TERRORIST
RAIDS
The shopkeeper watched me curiously as I tore o, the plastic
wrapping and read. The article was frustratingly terse. Following
a tip-o,, police had raided premises in north and east London,
looking for weapons and explosives. They’d arrested three men
and two women and retrieved a number of small arms. On the
same afternoon, armed police had been involved in a gun battle
on a residential street in Shepherd’s Bush, after a vehicle had failed
to stop when requested. The occupants of the vehicle opened -re
on the police, killing one, a Sergeant Terence Denham, aged thirtytwo. One of the terrorists was also killed. Another, who was
seriously wounded, surrendered. The dead gunman was named as
Sean Michael Ward, of West Kensington. Police were seeking a
twenty-six-year-old woman, Anna Louise Addison, who had .ed
the scene, hijacking a car that was later found abandoned in
Camden Town. A watch on coastal ports and airports had so far
failed to produce any results. Members of the public were warned
not to approach her as she was believed to be armed.
Sean was dead. At -rst I .atly refused to accept it. I spent the next
few days scouring every bookstall and hotel lobby in the city for
English-language papers and magazines. Though I was half mad
with guilt, I didn’t dare ask other travelers directly, fearful of drawing
attention to myself. I clung to the irrational hope that the Times
article was wrong or would turn out to be some kind of police ploy.
Eventually I found an old American news weekly, which con-rmed
the worst. It had happened a few days after I’d left. Leo had been
shot in the stomach. The police were holding Jay, Claire, Quinn and
several others, at least two of whom I didn’t know. Nowhere was
my name mentioned. And Sean Ward was dead. They’d printed a
picture of the street, cordoned o, with tape. A BMW was slewed
across the pavement, its windows shattered, its doors hanging open,
visibly punctured by nine-millimeter rounds. Beside the car lay a
form covered with a white sheet. Sean was dead because I’d betrayed
him. I’d killed him as surely as if I’d pulled the trigger myself. My
feeble attempt to keep Anna out of it now just seemed ridiculous. I
ought to have found another way—written a letter to the papers,
warned Gertler. Anything but tell Miles. My emotions led me in all
sorts of directions. I considered going to Lebanon, giving myself up
to the PFLP. I thought of going home and surrendering to the
authorities. I assessed various methods of killing myself. My only
comfort, if such a word is appropriate, was that Anna had escaped.
For the policeman, who was apparently a member of the Special
Patrol Group and trained to use -rearms, I had no feelings. A pig,
to me, was just a pig.
I was sitting in the Pudding Shop, trying to work up the courage
to go back and throw myself o, the roof of my hotel, when a
Dutch couple o,ered me a lift in their bus. They were heading for
Erzerum, then Tehran. As it turned out, Peter and Justine were
junkies. They showed me a way to sidestep the horror, an instant
method of coming to terms with my confusion and guilt. We
trundled up the rutted road into the mountains and gradually I
made myself a stranger to the world. The wheels turned round
and I disappeared.
Somewhere in Iran, I left my Dutch friends, who wanted to push
on to India. I arrived, perhaps in a taxi or riding on the back of
someone’s truck, in a village whose name I never knew. It was an
ancient and apparently timeless place, on which the world could
surely never intrude. The -elds were tilled with wooden plows. Old
men in woollen caps sat in the doorways of crumbling houses. I
made my wishes known by signs, -nding a room with a packed-earth
.oor and a neighbor who brought me food and enough opium to
prevent me from giving a damn about who’d lived and who’d died
because of me. I spent my days with Abbas and Hamid, the layabouts
who fed the -re for the village hammam, watching them lower themselves into a pit of bitumen, coming out black from the waist down.
Together we sat and smoked and watched the snow on the mountain.
The air was clean and pure, the sky a dome of blue tile.
All I’d wanted was certainty, a solid place to stand, but the more
I’d tried to produce it, the more ambiguity had grown up in my
life, choking it like pond weed. Gertler the capitalist had lived.
Sean Ward the terrorist had died. Accumulation, dissipation. I still
wanted to kill myself, but I lacked the will. My self-disgust was
total. Sucking the acrid smoke into my lungs, I was Darius the
King of Kings, an ant crawling on the cracked wall. The Shah,
about whom I’d once had an opinion, presided over my purgatory,
nailed above the wooden boards of the table in the form of a
hand-tinted print. Everything was connected to everything else
and none of it was very important. Nothing was true. Nothing
was good.
One day men came from the city in a dusty car. I hid in a sheepfold on the hill above the village. “America,” Abbas said, stabbing a
-nger at me. They’d been looking for the American. I moved on.
Yellow earth, a concrete ribbon of road. Men squatted at the
shoulder to urinate. The next dusty village and the next. At the
caravanserai, I sat in a crowd of truck drivers and watched a movie.
The girl danced in an overdriven screech of violins. People were
shouting at the screen. The smoke tasted like death inside me. A
man with a harelip tried to sell me a watch. I grew thinner and
more ragged and my hair and beard became a single tangled knot.
I met a black American wearing a ru0ed shirt and carrying a
matching set of alligator luggage. I met a German boy who seemed
to own nothing but a blanket. Pashtun tribesmen -red AK-s into
the air. Flies crawled across lambs’ hearts. The German boy couldn’t
remember his own name. Death lay in the leaves at the bottom of
my teacup, in the thud of the butcher’s cleaver.
I cultivated absence. I dared myself to doubt further. What did
it mean if nothing was real? What did it mean if there was nothing
between people except a brutal, cynical commerce? Money from
the money changer, the red-striped pole that marked the border.
White people begged from me. Just for the hell of it, I begged from
them. I learned to feed myself and buy drugs in at least four
languages, forgetting each one as I passed the guards into the next
pointlessly demarcated zone. Village women in sky blue burqas,
some Swedish girl with hepatitis. Her friend was on a smuggling
charge in Delhi. Could I help her out? I walked up a thousand steps
to a shrine. I attended a dog -ght. Truck headlights jogged up and
down in the dust. In Kabul someone stole most of my money as
I lay unconscious on a pavement outside a mosque. I converted
the rest into gemstones, which I sewed into the hem of my shirt.
Someone stole the gemstones.
I had no further thought of sustaining myself. I was happy not
to feel at home. It would be misleading to say those years were
blank. Many things happened to me. I lived on beaches, in the ruins
of an ancient city crawling with snakes and scorpions. Up in the
hills, I shared a bungalow with a Frenchman who called himself
Ram Das. We did nothing but inject. We rarely went outside. He
kept telling me that we were in Paradise. I was ill, feverish on
pallets and mattresses. I squatted in a shit-encrusted hole while a
man killed chickens outside, his feet just visible, caked with blood
and feathers. I passed out in the waiting room of a doctor’s clinic;
it was comforting to lay my head on the cool tiled .oor. Once I
was paid to .y something across a border. It was in the lining of
a suitcase. I carried the suitcase. I stood at the Customs table. I
gave it to the man by the baggage claim. The second time I just
took the case and traveled on. I was rich again, for a time.
With a sort of impersonal curiosity I noticed the horror I inspired
in people. Perhaps, I began to think, I wasn’t inspiring their horror
at all. Perhaps I was their horror. I forgot what had happened before.
The world was an illusion. Death teemed in the cities and over the
empty land. The more I struggled, the more death I produced.
Su,ering rippled out of me as I thrashed about in the water.
At last I got what I wanted. There is a period of two years,
between and 6, of which I remember nothing at all.
One day I returned to Bangkok. I knew I’d been there before
because the route to the red light district was familiar. I arrived on
foot. I’d been with a woman up in the north, but she’d died or left
me. There was a weeping abscess on my arm and I was missing a
tooth. For two or three nights I slept on the street in Patpong,
curled up in an alleyway behind a go-go bar. “Kee nok,” the touts
hissed at me, aiming punches and kicks to keep me away from
their customers. Birdshit farang. The war in Vietnam was over, but
the city was still full of Americans, uniformed soldiers and sailors,
ex-GIs who couldn’t face going home. I told them hard-luck stories
as they tumbled out of the bars with their girls. I’d make them
laugh by imitating fractured Thai English. Pussy smoke cigarette,
pussy open bottle. There was a dealer who sat on a chair outside
one of the prostitutes’ short-time hotels, an old man festooned
with protective amulets. If you bought his gear he’d let you shoot
it upstairs, in a low-lit room with a record player. That room was
my Shangri-La, my El Dorado. I o,ered to sell him my passport.
I didn’t recognize the farang shaking my hand in front of Yom’s
noodle stall. He kept saying his name, but I couldn’t understand
him. “You see show?” I asked, trying to .ip into my comic Thaitout routine. “You want see love show?” He bought me food and
watched me -x up in his hotel room. I think he must have paid
for the heroin too. I nodded o, for a while and woke up and looked
at him looking tearfully back at me and it really was Saul Kleeman,
prosperous and tanned, wearing a loud batik shirt, trying to talk
to me about Anna.
“Chris,” he said, for the tenth or twentieth time.
“No, man,” I told him. “All that’s in the past.”
“Anna,” he said. “Anna’s dead.” He told me what had happened
and let me sleep in his room and took me to the doctor and gave
me fresh clothes and some time later, a day or two days, he took
me downstairs and put me in a taxi. I stared blankly out of the
window at paddy -elds, my forehead pressed against the glass.
I never knew exactly what Saul was doing in Bangkok, or how
to get in touch with him afterward. He saved my life, and I’ve
always been grateful to him, even if I sometimes wish he’d minded
his own business. He looked well, I remember. I’d like to think
things went all right for him. I retained very little of what he told
me about Anna. What I know now I’ve gleaned in fragments, over
the years. Some of it I only found out from sifting through God’s
unsorted stock of books.
Anna successfully .ed Britain, with help from the PFLP. She
disappeared from view for a time, living in the Middle East or
North Africa, possibly in Libya, and next surfaced in as part
of a team of terrorists who hijacked an airliner en route from
Frankfurt to Tel Aviv, in an attempt to force the West German
authorities to free prisoners of the RAF and Rote Zelle. They were
partially successful. The prisoners weren’t released but they were
allowed to land in Algiers and .y out again on another plane, with
a substantial sum of money. Gun Girl, the trashy biography illustrated with her ex-husband’s photos—the Chelsea fashion shots
and a couple of salacious nudes—dates from this time, when she
was an object of almost hysterical media interest in Britain.
Class warfare is life process, wrote Anna and her comrades, who
came from Japan and Germany and the refugee camps of Lebanon.
For us, production and destruction are identical. Three months after
the Algiers hijack, eight of them entered the West German embassy
in Copenhagen, an imposing neoclassical building on the waterfront. They killed a security guard and a junior diplomat and took
twenty hostages in an upper room. Once the Danish police had
surrounded the building, they issued a series of demands, including
the release of prisoners in Israeli and West German jails and the
provision of an aircraft to .y them to the destination of their
choice. After the -rst twelve-hour deadline expired, they took the
economic attaché on to the balcony and shot him in the head. It
is possible that Anna herself was the executioner. There is a photograph said to be of her, taken earlier that day, leaning out of a
second-.oor window, raising a -st.
The siege lasted almost eighty hours. Bonn and Tel Aviv refused
to negotiate. On the third night, Danish special forces moved in
and retook the building. During the assault, all the terrorists, seven
hostages and three soldiers were killed. Anna’s body, or the body
that was identi-ed as hers, was found in the conference room,
badly burned: a booby-trap rigged by the terrorists had been detonated during the assault. The oddest aspect of the siege was the
terrorists’ reported use of a technique that in earlier communiqués
they termed the ARC e,ect. Surviving hostages testi-ed that they’d
been herded into the conference room, where projectors and audio
equipment were set up. For more than twenty-four hours they
were subjected to some kind of audiovisual display, incorporating taped speeches and images of American atrocities in Vietnam.
The purpose, it seems, was experimental—to induce ARC, an
acceleration of revolutionary consciousness, to alter their politics
with son et lumière.
The Anna of the embassy siege is someone I never knew, who’d
traveled to a psychological place I could never follow. My Anna
was a woman who consciously suppressed her own desires in the
name of a greater good. Always, in some part of myself, I’d refused
to connect the two, so it felt like a revelation, a coup, when I realized in France that it was possible she hadn’t been in Copenhagen
after all. When we were lovers, I would always pester her about
the future. I wanted to know what she imagined, what sort of
society she hoped to create. I think, covertly, I wanted her to
describe how things would be for us, for me and her. I never understood why she always rebu,ed my questions, until the day she
angrily insisted I stop asking them. “Can’t you see,” she told me,
“that the future’s not for us?” I didn’t follow. “Look at how we
live,” she said. “We’re damaged people. There would be no place
for us in the world we’re trying to build.”
When I arrived at Wat Tham Nok I was in a state of agitated
withdrawal. For the last hour of the journey, I’d been hassling the
driver to let me out, but he only waved a hand and tapped his
-ngers against his pursed lips, indicating that he spoke no English.
When I saw the golden spire of the stupa I realized my destination
was a temple but nothing prepared me for what was to come, the
prison conditions of the addicts’ compound, the formation exercises in front of a huge portrait of the king. The abbot of Wat
Tham Nok had been curing alcoholics and drug addicts for years
using his own patented herbal emetic, a vile potion containing
more than a hundred ingredients. Saul had paid for me to take the
cure, giving instructions that I couldn’t be trusted to look after
myself and should be restrained if I tried to leave. This was how
I came to spend my -rst twenty-four hours at Wat Tham Nok
chained to a pillar.
I was barely aware of where I was. I thought Saul was present
in the room, and screamed at him that he was a bastard pig traitor.
I thought he’d sold me into slavery. They’d dressed me in a set of
faded pink cotton pajamas. A novice monk had been left to monitor
my progress. He must have been about twelve years old. He sat in
the corner of the hall, silently watching me, .anked by a pair of
plastic buckets.
When I’d calmed down, I was told where I was and asked
whether I’d like help easing the withdrawal pains. That help turned
out not to be methadone, as I’d hoped, but the name of the Buddha,
written on a small piece of paper, which I was told to memorize
and swallow, like a coded message. Over my head, the abbot intoned
a cheery blessing. “Repeat the sacred name when you feel craving,”
he told me, through an interpreter. For a week I was rousted up
at dawn from my pallet in the addicts’ barracks and taken through
the ritual of purging, vomiting into a trough while monks chanted
and clanged hand cymbals. There were more than twenty of us,
Thai and foreigners; we muttered and swore our way through the
sleepless nights in a dozen languages.
Round and round. The days and nights, turning circles. The
brown jets of vomit. Clear running water, splashed over my face.
I lived o, fruit and bowls of rice broth and after a week it grew
easier, the spasms in my gut more manageable and the world
somehow crisper and more stable around me. I did small tasks
about the compound, sweeping and mopping, folding laundry into
piles. I repeated the name of the Buddha, usually abusively. One
of the monks gave lectures in English. I listened to him describe
the Four Noble Truths, the eightfold path that leads to the cessation of su,ering. Forsake anger, give up pride. Sorrow cannot touch the
man who is not in thrall to anything, who owns nothing.
But how to do that? Without heroin there was nothing to distract
me from my self-disgust. I spoke about it in veiled terms to Phra
Anan and he told me to take refuge in the Buddha. O/cially I was
“cured”; it was time for me to leave. The trouble was that I didn’t
have anywhere to go. I couldn’t see any way forward and though I
still wasn’t sure if I deserved to live, let alone live free of sorrow,
I knew I wanted nothing more to do with death, my own or anyone
else’s. I asked if I could stay. Phra Anan spoke to the abbot, who
agreed, on condition I worked hard and adopted the same rules as
the novice monks. I was given a little hut in the monastery grounds
and for the next four years Wat Tham Nok became my home. I
shaved my head and wore the robes of a novice. I ate my last meal
at midday. During that time I didn’t sing or dance, take intoxicants,
or have sex. I didn’t wear a watch. I wrote letters to people seeking
treatment for their addictions. I counseled the foreigners, always
careful to ensure that they only knew me as Monk Saul or Monk
Andrew, names I alternated with each new intake. I followed the
real monks round on their morning alms and sometimes I handled
money, which they were forbidden to do. I’d often walk behind
them, carrying donations, the over.ow from the metal bowls that
the townspeople -lled with rice and curry, with other monkish
necessities, soap and candles, toothpaste, socks.
Wat Tham Nok and the little nearby town became the limits of
my world, a body whose third eye was the -ssure in the rock on
the hillside where thousands of swallows nested, the “bird cave”
that gave the monastery its name. It was pleasant to sit in the
assembly hall, with its giant reclining Buddha, too vast to contemplate at once, and attempt mindfulness in front of a segmented
hand or toe or single passive eye, which seemed to look out on the
world with in-nite resignation. When my thoughts wandered, the
statue’s great eyes sometimes looked as dull as those of an opium
smoker. I’d try to observe my thought, see that it was .eeting, and
relinquish it. I tried, in all things, to relinquish control. Then I tried
to stop trying. The greatest transcendence is not the greatest transcendence. Therefore it is called the greatest transcendence.
Though I was lonely I found my work comforting, and as I
followed the simple, menial routine through months and years,
I gradually began to feel less connected to what I’d thought and
done before. The monks taught that to escape su,ering one must
reject the impulse to act on the world. The desire for change, they
insisted, is just another form of craving. I felt I’d no right to act at
all, so it seemed all the easier to turn inward and imagine that in
renouncing my politics I’d given up nothing important, just a source
of pain. As the world of the armed struggle faded, it came to seem
like a dream. The liberation I’d fought for was surely impossible,
illusory. For now, whispered Chris Carver. For ever, murmured the
voice I heard in the tiny sounds of Wat Tham Nok, the beating of
swallows’ wings, the .ick-.ick of a monk’s plastic sandals on a
path. The Dhammapada begins, Mind is the forerunner of all processes:
it is chief and they are mind-made. If one talks or acts with an impure
mind then suffering follows as the wheel follows the ox’s tread. So I tried
to purify my mind, to accept that the only possible sphere of
liberation was the self. I thought I had a chance to achieve peace.
I might as well have been doing push-ups.
Two things happened. There was the blessing for Mr. Boonmee’s
taxis, the last in a long line of last straws, and there was the postcard an ex-addict sent to the monastery o/ce. She was a Canadian
who’d found herself on holiday in southern England and decided
to send us greetings from the cathedral town of Chichester. I
picked it up out of the wire tray on my desk and in the face of
its acid blues and greens, its little curlicued banners titling a selection of bland views, the room I sat in, with its stone .oor and
piles of dusty papers, seemed forlorn and somehow ridiculous,
part of a childish game I was playing with myself. I was sick of
the birds rustling in the trees, sick of the very air, which lately
had been heavy with threats and corruption. It was one thing to
renounce the world and contemplate the liberation of the self. It
was another to sustain this while watching the monks greet military o/cers and local politicians arriving for the ceremonials on
the king’s birthday.
It took me a long time to put a name to my disillusionment. I
wanted to go home. After so long living in an institution, the
prospect of formlessness was frightening, but Wat Tham Nok had
come to seem as oppressive to me as any Jesuit seminary, the monks
no di,erent from the guardians of established religion anywhere
else in the world. When I went to the abbot to tell him I intended
to leave, he made me a present of a protective charm and expressed
the wish that I would soon -nd a wife and start a family. Then he
returned to his papers, exuding an air of benevolent, unshakeable
unconcern. Phra Anan was the same. I left Wat Tham Nok feeling
I’d made no more impression on the place than a pebble thrown
into a pool of water.
I landed at Heathrow airport in the summer of , armed with
the Canadian addict’s postcard, a new passport, which had been
issued without fuss by the British embassy in Bangkok, a tent and
enough sterling to buy me a train ticket to the south coast. I
expected to be arrested and I think, had it happened, I’d have
accepted it with equanimity. But the immigration o/cial barely
glanced in my direction as he waved me through.
In Chichester I sat under the Market Cross and watched middle
England go about its business, supremely oblivious to the wider
world. It was the place depicted on the postcard, no more and no
less. It gave me pleasure and a kind of relief. For the -rst couple
of months I lived on a campsite, picking and boxing fruit to accumulate the deposit to rent a .at. By the following year I was living
in a bedsit near the railway station, working for crazy Olla, trying
to keep my head down and tread lightly, to live a humble life. I
accepted the faintly ridiculous role in which I found myself, the
ino,ensive little guy in the woollen waistcoat, the ex-hippie selling
scented candles and doing his best to hide from the sharp-suited
eighties.
Then one day Miranda stopped browsing the rack of greeting
cards and asked whether I’d like to take her for a drink.
Olla’s shop was an odd vantage point from which to watch the
new decade assemble itself. After my long absence the di,erence
in mood was stark. If I watched the news or read a paper, both of
which I tried to avoid, I found myself dragged back into questions
I thought I’d buried. Miranda used to berate me for my lack of
politics. She was always getting involved in causes: Amnesty, Free
Tibet. She bought mugs and sweatshirts. Her concerns had the
character of enthusiasms, .eeting, scattergun. Once in a while she’d
wonder aloud about going on a march. As her cosmetics business
grew, she bene-ted from all the things she vaguely disapproved
of, deregulation and low taxation and the other strategies of the
disciplinarian economics that had ba0ingly become known as
the “free” market, and because she’d never really understood the
reasons for her disapproval, she gradually stopped vocalizing it
and then, eventually, it was as if she’d never held such views at
all and was free to compete, to run and jump and jostle with all
the rest. And meanwhile, in secret, it gradually came to seem
important to me to make something uni-ed from the broken
threads of my life, not to lose touch altogether with Chris Carver
and his dreams of revolution. Did anything connect me with who
I’d once been? And if not, what had I lost, owning only half of
a life?
“When did you -nd me?” I asked Miles, as we sat in the pub,
whose midafternoon pall was only accentuated by the piped music,
a speeded-up woman singing about getting higher to the accompaniment of some kind of synthetic drumbeat.
“Her Majesty’s government would love to say you were never
lost, but you were. I heard they picked up Michael Frame a couple
of years ago. A passport check, most probably.”
“Why didn’t they arrest me right away?”
“Oh, they were probably saving you for a rainy day.”
“And here you are.”
“Here I am. Pitter-patter.”
He walked me back to the house and told me to make my
arrangements because someone would be picking me up in the
morning to take me to London. After he left, I sat in the study,
watching the workmen larking about on the lawn and thinking
how thin life was, how easily the whole charade of Mike Frame
and Miranda Martin could be torn down, like an old net
curtain.
Here, under the tower, I’m frozen to the bone, but the line of
hilltops is clear along the horizon, the sky’s blacks opening up into
purples and inky blues, bruise colors. The smashed-up sky persuades
me to get up and walk around, forcing blood into my legs, into
my feet, which feel like two clubs inside my beaten-up tennis shoes.
Likewise blood -lters slowly into the sky, until -nally the sun spills
over the ridge like metal over the lip of a crucible and a faint heat
starts to warm my face.
I make my way down the hill to the Bar des Sports and when
it opens, I buy a cup of co,ee and an apple brandy, which I sip,
eyed suspiciously by the woman behind the zinc, who thinks, rightly
I suppose, that I am up to no good and should be kept under
observation. When the alcohol has risen through my body and
broken my solid chill into constituent bergs and .oes, I pay my
bill and walk back up the sloping street to Anna’s house. The line
of doors winds upward, some shabby, others neat and bright, and
there are early signs of life, open shutters, a man on a Mobylette,
its engine rising in pitch as it labors over the cobbles.
It occurs to me that maybe she will kill me.
Here is the door. It’s painted a dull ochre yellow. I recognize the
house beside it, with its row of geraniums in terra-cotta pots,
the one belonging to the old women who told me Anna was
Swedish.
I knock.
I hear her come to answer it. The door opens. She is wearing a
cotton kimono, printed with a design of woodblock bamboo. Her
hair has fallen over her face; as she looks up at me, she sweeps it
back with one hand and stares, -xing me with clear gray-blue eyes,
which, like her mouth, are nested in a tracery of delicate lines.
“Anna.”
“Excusez-moi?”
“Anna, it’s me. Chris.”
“Who?”
“Chris Carver. I’m alone. No one followed me here, Anna.”
She looks blank. “I don’t think I know you.”
In both French and English, she speaks with an accent. Scandinavian, it sounds like. I look at her and say my name again. And
a third time.
“Chris Carver. You remember me, Anna Addison. I know you
remember me.”
“I’m not Anna. I never heard of any Anna. Do you know what
time it is? It’s very early in the morning.”
I look at her face and suddenly I’m not sure. It seems softer,
ill-de-ned, not much like Anna’s tribal mask. But it’s been such a
long time. Anything could have happened. She could have had
plastic surgery.
“Anna Addison,” I say, with more insistence. “Don’t pretend.”
“I don’t know this person.”
“Please, don’t pretend.”
“I tell you I don’t know her.”
I realize I’m scaring her. I hear myself raising my voice and her
telling me she’ll call the police and all the time I look at her, staring
hard into her eyes as if daring her to blink, and -nally I’m forced
to admit that I’m completely adrift, without reference or marker.
“I’m sorry to have bothered you,” I say.
She slams the door in my face and I realize Anna is dead. She
has been dead all along, a charred corpse in a Copenhagen conference room, mute and fanatical, -xed in the past like amber.
I walk slowly down the hill and phone Miles from the Bar des
Sports.
“Where are you?”
“I’m in France.”
“What are you doing there?”
“I just saw Anna Addison. How about that?”
“Don’t be stupid. Anna’s dead.”
“Is she? Yes, I suppose she is.”
“Chris, where are you? I’m worried about you.”
“Is Anna dead, Miles?”
“Of course she’s dead. She’s been dead forever. Are you all
right?”
“I thought I saw her.”
“Chris.”
“What do I tell Miranda? I want her kept out of it.”
“Chris, you should come home.”
“Talk to me about Miranda.”
“You don’t have to tell her anything, not if you don’t want to.
We can come and get you. Stash you away somewhere. How about
it? A nice country hotel.”
“Run away. Fuck o, and hide. Good plan.”
“Look, how about this? Twenty grand and a head start. More
cash than that, if I can swing it. Forget what I said about a trial. I
was angry. You come back, you do the interview, you hang around
long enough to give the press a taste—until the job’s done, absolute
minimum, no more. We’ll help you. Give you somewhere to hide
out. Someone to handle your calls. Then it’s over and you disappear. By the time the police, or whoever else you’re afraid of, arrive,
you can be long gone. I’ll help you, Chris. Come in and I’ll help
you.”
“Don’t lie, Miles. I’m too old to start again.”
“No, you’re not. Like I said, more if I can swing it. Probably
more like thirty grand.”
“And you could get me a passport?”
“Yes. That too. A clean slate, if that’s what you want. All your
sins forgiven.”
“Have you got kids, Miles?”
“Yes, a son and a daughter. Twelve and fourteen.”
“You still with the mother?”
“No.”
“Why not?”
“You know how it is.”
“No I don’t. That’s the funny thing. I don’t know how it is. Never
have.”
Miles gives me a number and an address in London. He wants
me to ditch the car and .y. If I tell him exactly where I am, he’ll
sort it out. Just go to Toulouse. Dump the car. There will be a
ticket waiting for me at the BA desk. He’ll meet the .ight. He can’t
help enough. His voice is soothing and richly compassionate.
I get into the car and head toward the autoroute. Behind me, the
tower rises up like an amputated limb.
Because legality is just the name for everything that’s not
dangerous for the ruling order, because the poor starve while the
rich play, because the .ickering system of signs is enticing us to
give up our precious interiority and join the dance and because
just round the corner an insect world is waiting, so saying we must
love one another or die isn’t enough, not by a long way, because
there’ll come a time when any amount of love will be too late.
But it’s something, love, not nothing, and that’s why I pull over
and -nd a phone booth in a rest area and punch a number into
the phone. Miranda picks up on the third ring.
“It’s me.”
“Oh, God. Mike? Where are you?”
“Chris,” I tell her. “My name’s Chris.”
Historical Note
Certain things are always erased or distorted in a novel and this is
no exception. It seems worth saying that it is not a representation
of the politics or personalities of the Angry Brigade, who carried
out a series of bomb attacks on targets including the Police National
Computer and the Employment Secretary’s house in the early
seventies.
The British revolutionary underground has attracted less
attention than its counterparts in the United States, Italy, and
Germany. Many people, even in the U.K., have forgotten the Angry
Brigade, whose notoriety peaked at the time of the “Stoke
Newington Eight” trial in 1972, at the end of which four defendants
received long prison sentences. There are several reasons for the
AB’s disappearance from history. In part it is simply a question of
intensity. The armed struggle that engulfed Italy and Germany had
no counterpart in the U.K., where the actions of young revolutionaries
were eclipsed in scale and brutality by the civil war in Northern
Ireland. The Provisional IRA’s murderous mainland bombing
campaign in 1974 left forty-six people dead and drained away
countercultural support for terrorist tactics at a time when
elsewhere in Europe a certain glamour was still attached to the
idea of political violence.
According to veterans, the AB was never a formally constituted
organization with a central command and a cell structure. Rather
it was a name (like “Marion Delgado,” a tag adopted by some
members of the Weather Underground, or “Luther Blissett,” more
recently popular in Italian leftist circles) that could be used to “sign”
actions committed by a variety of groups and individuals who
broadly described themselves as “libertarian socialists.” In the early
seventies London was a haven for Greek, Portuguese, and Spanish
exiles working to overthrow the Fascist dictatorships in their home
countries. Numerous attacks against embassies, airline offices, and
other targets took place. Many incidents were not reported in the
British press, who at the time maintained a cozy relationship with
the rest of what used to be called “the Establishment.” The AB
received both inspiration and (it is usually assumed) material
support from these networks, and many of its actions were cloaked
in the same media silence.
Readers who want information about the Angry Brigade are
directed to the papers of the Stoke Newington Eight Defence
Group and writings by Gordon Carr, Jean Weir. John Barker, and
Stuart Christie. I am grateful to the librarians at the London School
of Economics for use of their archive. Thanks to Andy Davies for
information about police procedure. Quotations from the
Dhammapadda are adapted from translations by Joan Mascaró and
Ninian Smart. Mistakes in the translation or interpretation of the
Pali Canon are my own. I have drawn on Ron Bailey’s account of
actions by London Squatters and Chris Faiers’s account of the
occupation of 144 Piccadilly by the London Street Commune,
among many other sources. Contemporary respect is due to Dr.
J. J. King and all former denizens of The Mitre and The Bart
Wells.
The Post Office tower was bombed on October 31, 1971. No
claim of responsibility was made.