Whenever his name was used in its
triadic completeness—either by Amelia or himself—he knew he'd
faltered, failed, or in this case, forgotten to buy a bottle of wine.
If his first name was used with an extended emphasis on one of the
syllables, it was a sign of mild frustration, but the triple
reference implied a severe and formal rebuke. Duncan thought it must
be a matrilineal inheritance. A requirement to help the less
intelligent of their offspring, the males, survive as best they
could. A chorus of Mothers sang in his ear all stating the full names
of their children and scolding them for running into the street,
climbing on the roof, or wading out into the water after their
hand-made sailboat.
Likewise, Mothers of famous writers
might well have raised their voices he thought. Perhaps even with a
finger and thumb to the earlobe in a form of auricular elongation:
Edgar Allan Poe! No you may not bring
that bird in here!
Herman Nimrod Melville! No you may not
have a goldfish!
Henry David Thoreau! No we won't do
your laundry and bring you meals while you loaf about in the woods!
Washington Ambrose Irving! Stop
maundering about in the shadows and get out and play!
Thomas Ruggles Pynchon Jr.! You're
going to the party, and you're going to mingle, mingle, mingle!
(Not knowing the true middle names of
Melville or Irving, Duncan improvised accordingly.)
He entered the SAQ in search of a
bottle of wine that would fit their budget, their self-respect, and
their desire to accommodate. A narrow scope. Twenty dollars to him
was two hundred to another. Two hundred to that one would be two
thousand to yet another. And so on, and so on. He was near the bottom
of the wine chain, a few stones up from the base with the majority in
this highly taxed pyramidal world.
A Québec wine for their meal with
Mélisande seemed apropos. Manoeuvring between the well-clad
aficionados with their shopping carts overflowing, the empty-handed
uninitiated looking lost, the ultra-stylish with their cell-phones to
their ears discussing vintages with their distant partners, and the
hard-liners with their bottles of liquor making a beeline to the
cashier and future redemption, he observed his fellow shoppers and
thought some of them reminded him of book browsers. Browsers eyeing
the shelves looking for style or substance, rustic or sophisticated,
fruity or dry, light or heavy, unbridled or reserved, quirky or old
fashioned, charming or classic, earthy or elegant, polished or
transparent, florid or simple, formulaic or innovative. Writers
should go in for wineries he thought. Golfers and musicians had
invaded the field, why not writers: the Joyce Carol Oates Pinot
Blanc, the Margaret Atwood Organic Chardonnay, the John Irving
Shiraz, the Thomas Pynchon Cabernet Sauvignon, the Danny Wallace . .
. hmm, perhaps Lad lit and Chick lit were in the ales
and spritzers.
Were there not as many styles of
writing as wines? Were they not all drinkable—to a degree?
Sometimes he enjoyed a light read after a complex one, and was
unnerved by those who read only one type of book, one writing style,
enough to wonder if there was something wrong with him. Was he
all-embracing or non-committal, broad minded or devotion impaired?
Did he lack conviction?
He chose a light-bodied red from Québec
Eastern Townships, Domaine Les Brome Cuvée Julien and made
his way to the cash, eyeing the other customers' purchases with
interest.
*
Noel Welwyn Gough nodded his head to
his daughter Elizabeth's reference to the talented Dame Clara Furse,
her role model for achievement in the world of high finance.
“You remember the kerfuffle when she
became the CEO of the London Stock Exchange?”
Noel nodded again, bracing himself
against the taxi door while Masud, the taxi driver he'd
befriended—one of many drivers he'd learned, with higher education
degrees working as cab drivers—turned a corner a bit sharply as
they made an approach to the Stewart Museum on Ile St-Hélène. “Profit
and loss my dear, profit and loss.”
“She had to deal with the Old Boys
Father. She must have put their knickers in a twist. I can only
imagine their conversations over a glass of port at their clubs,”
she said, looking at the taxi meter's green digital numbers mounting
like the temperature in the car. “She certainly deserved her DBE
for those eight years.”
Masud pulled up beside the gates to the
old fort. “Le Festin du Gouveneur,” he said, turning off the
meter.
“Thank you very much Masud,” Noel
said, handing him the bills to cover the fee. “Keep the change my
good friend.”
“Enjoy your meal sir, and call me,
you have my cell number. No problem. I pick you up.”
“Thank you Masud, very kind of you
sir.”
Elizabeth took her father's arm and
together they walked towards the open gates of the tawny and grey
field-stone wall. Jacques Cartier bridge, its cantilever arches
rising in the distance like an enormous abstract sculpture of a
Bactrian camel, provided a steady hum of rush hour traffic punctuated
by the percussive rumble and shudder of large trucks. In the quieter
moments, they could hear the occasional cry of the gulls over the
high clear whispers of the St. Lawrence river, an endless susurration
of memory flowing to the east, cleansing the shores along the way.
“My secretary at the office told me
we had to try this restaurant before it moved to Old Montreal. It's
their last season at the old fort.” She looked around her as if for
someone she knew. “She said we might even see a ghost or two
roaming the grounds later on. Many died on the island. Soldiers.”
“Yes, so I've heard. The old
buildings certainly have a charm to them. Very . . . oh my,
Elizabeth, look, a pillory,” he said tapping his left hand on her
arm as they came upon the wooden replica of a period punishment
device in the forecourt of the restaurant. “You must take my
photograph in the pillory. Your Mother will relish it for certain.
She'll place a framed copy on the mantle.”
She helped her Father position himself
in the contraption and lowered the hinged upper board over his neck
and hands trying not to pinch him. He felt a strain on his neck as
he tried to look up for his daughter's cell phone camera, a
lamentably modest punishment for his possible failures as a parent.
He smiled and wriggled his fingers and acted the fool. She took
numerous shots taking time to judge them worthy or not, while Noel
looked about thinking how painful it was just to be in such a
position, let alone be humiliated and abused by the rabble and mob as
happened in the days of . . . yes, in the days of Daniel Defoe.
He remembered the author had been pilloried for a pamphlet concerning
dissenters. Yes, he wrote a poem to the device, A Hymn to the
Pillory. “'Hail hieroglyphic state machine,'” he quoted as
loudly as he could considering his position and the constraints upon
his verbal projection.
“Just a few more photos Father,”
Elizabeth said, thinking he had mumbled something like 'hey get me
out of this thing,' which she thought odd considering her Father's
rather formal word choice.
Noel relaxed and shifted his legs to
ease the pain developing in his lower back. He felt extremely
vulnerable. Good old Defoe. What a challenging life. A time of
shifting loyalties, uncertain futures and quick wits. Tempted by
Janus Defoe was, yes tempted by Janus. He played himself up to be the
martyr to the public for speaking truth, while accepting the King's
or Queen's shilling on the sly. He'd written the Hymn while
awaiting trial, and had it published and distributed before he trod
that board. Always covering his back in a back stabbing world. Always
trying to be a step ahead in a world of shadows.
“There you are,” she said, lowering
her phone so he could look at the photographs. “I'll email them to
Mother tonight.” She helped him out of the wooden constraint, and
with hands on hips, he leaned back in a stretch.
“My God, that was only a moment,”
he said. “Imagine hours, days. Here I must take one of you. Yes,
yes Elizabeth, you'll want one for posterity.” She slipped easily
into the grooves, plenty of room to move. “Smile Elizabeth. Who
knows my dear, you may well be the CEO of the stock exchange one
day!” She rolled her eyes and smiled.
Knowing his daughter was not greatly
inspired by literature like her parents, he hesitated to bring up the
subject of Defoe, but the opportunity seemed unique and timely, and
the awkward silences between them could be dutifully filled.
“Daniel Defoe was pilloried once,”
he said looking up at the ghostly thin mist. “But he was a smart
man Elizabeth. Prior to his conviction, while sitting in a cell in
Newgate, he composed a poem where
he listed politicians, military leaders, clergy, lawyers, and yes,
bankers and stock brokers as fit for a visit to the wooden throne,
while innocent men, often authors trying to reveal the truth, like
himself, bowing with a hand on his heart, found themselves unjustly
within the wooden hoops.”
“Now we have social media Father. The
pillory of the digital age.”
They laughed as they reached the heavy
wooden doors to the restaurant, where period clad actors were
preparing to sing, dance and tell stories from Montreal's historic
past while their guests dined and quaffed from old pewter plate.
*
Jerome was roused from a light doze as
the car came to a slow stop. He yawned and rubbed his eyes.
Perhaps he was home already, waiting at a nearby red light. The smell
of Montreal had alerted him to its proximity awhile back, its special
sour odour preceding it like most large cities. As he sat up and
stretched, the black privacy glass between the back of the car and
the driver was lowered revealing either Bartholomew or Thaddeus at
the wheel.
“There's a slight delay Mr. Van
Starke. We're on Jacques Cartier bridge. Possibly an accident.”
“Okay, thanks for the info,
Bartholomew.” He looked through the front window and noticed a
large truck taking up most of the space in front of them, Phoenician
Imports Ltd. in dark letters across the back doors. “Could I
possibly look out the window while we wait?”
“Sure, no problem.”
Jerome watched as an inner sheath,
black and impenetrable, was lowered revealing the outer layer of
regular see through glass. Very clever, he thought, very clever. He
was on the eastern side of the bridge and so positioned to look down
at La Ronde amusement park on the site of the old Expo 67. He
remembered strolling with Thérèse along the waterfront in the
summer months, hearing the screams of thrill seekers carried on the
winds. The bridge, he often thought, looked like an enormous green
roller coaster itself, a cast iron monster, a prelude to the
miniature reality below. Thérèse. Thérèse. The first thing when
he got home was to try to phone her. Perhaps he could convince her to
find a local job and settle down with him. They could find a place
together, one of those very large eight and a half duplex flats in
the east-end of the city, space for his painting and for her office
and all of their books. Perhaps get a dog or a cat.
The dark waters of the river drew his
attention and he shivered. “Pierre, Pierre, Pierre,” he whispered
with his warm breath against the cold glass. He pictured the grave
stone of his lost friend, P. H. Sable 1975-1993. He shivered
again at the thought of jumping from such a height. It almost seemed
like an act of courage. How much he's missed over the years. If only
he'd held on. Persisted. The currents took him, the whirlpools spun
him, and nature stripped him of all semblance having spent months
below the down river ice. A winter suicide into frigid icy waters,
washed ashore in the spring near Varennes of all places. Jerome
shook his head. “Pierre, Pierre, Pierre.” That odd man at the
morgue giving him a coin from Pierre's pocket, both sides eroded of
all letters and images, rough, pitted, antique. A memento mori. A
warning. A coin for the ferryman he'd said.
They advanced a few car lengths and
came to a standstill again. The Olympic stadium stood out to the east
like a giant curling stone. He pressed his head against the glass and
made out the lines of the old Pied-du-courant prison on the edge of
the far shore, now the headquarters of the SAQ. The house for the
Gouveneur of the old prison had been turned into a centre devoted to
promoting wine and wine culture and somehow Thérèse had discovered
it was going to close its doors, so she'd invited a group of them for
a series of wine tastings and a dinner. Pavor had been in a good mood
that night, making them all laugh with his jokes about wine tasting
vocabulary, imitating the voice, in good fun, of their beloved
television culinary expert Daniel Pinard, whose rich expressive voice
was one they had all grown up with and enjoyed. Then all the
photographs they'd taken in front of the old prison door and beneath
the statue nearby in la Place des Patriotes. Those were good times he
thought. Everyone close together busy with their work. And the after
dinner party at Pavor's apartment on Sherbrooke Street overlooking the remnant towers built in the 1690s for the old Fort des
Messieurs. Jerome laid his head back and closed his eyes. What a
great apartment he thought. His copy of Giorgio di Chirico's The
Nostalgia of the Infinite looked stunning over Pavor's mantlepiece. One of his better copies he thought. Colours just right.
He sighed. Things keep slipping away.
Doors closing, people leaving. He felt he must be going through an
early mid-life crisis. Or perhaps it was his reaction to the two days
in the country with Declan and Lucrezia. A form of withdrawal from
the stable life of the well-to-do. She had kissed him lightly on his
cheek before he got into the vintage Citroen Traction Avant, Declan
already at the wheel revving the engine and adjusting his sun
glasses. The tour along the finely paved and fenced roads around his
property was one tinged with anxiety, Declan shifting gears with
precision and speed, taking the corners slightly fast, the rubber
tires voicing their grievance.
A flush of embarrassment overcame him
as he remembered he'd left behind the journal he'd written in. Where
would that end up, he wondered. Something for the next visitor to
peruse or continue with.
The car moved forward and continued on
without disruption.
“Won't be long now Mr. Van Starke.
Home sweet home.” Bartholomew disappeared behind the rising dark
glass divide.
*
Dusk descended on the Clock Tower Quay
as a stout man in a long coat, his back to the iron fence
and the dark waters behind him, looked at his watch with impatience.
Dwarfed by the white tower looming above him, he looked up to compare
his Swiss watch to the tower's imported British precision time piece at the
top, once the time-keeper for all landfalls and departures.
His man was late. Cheap wrist watch he thought. Or did they rely on cell phones now?
His man was late. Cheap wrist watch he thought. Or did they rely on cell phones now?
The headlights of a car drew up beside
his own vehicle parked a hundred feet away and he watched as his
driver got out and approached the car to retrieve a briefcase.
Finally. He turned around and looked across the water at Ile St.
Hélène with its brown stone tower rising from the trees like some
kind of medieval keep. Finally he could close this file for good. Get
on with his job. The footsteps of his driver approached and he looked
down river towards the lights of Jacques Cartier bridge. It reminded
him of a bridge in England, another time, another meeting. He liked
meetings by water. They offered avenues of escape. His driver was
behind him now, holding the briefcase towards him so he could easily
open it and withdraw the contents.
He faced his driver and, with his large powerful hands, he removed the contents sensing already the weight of a fool's misreckoning. He turned from his driver and propped
the volume on the railing and flipped the pages. Accounting entries
in an old hand, dates from 1881. He flipped towards the end
and came across a handful of pages in Latin text, obviously from an
old manuscript. He held it up and shook it, but nothing emerged. The spine title was plain. Strand Cordage - Cash Book -1881. He
looked up and sighed deeply. He turned to face his driver raised his eyebrows, then as if he were tossing salt over his shoulder, propelled the volume high into the air behind him. The driver watched as it opened its covers like a bird taking flight, but, like Icarus, it plummeted, unseen, unheard, to the dark fast moving waters below, sinking quickly, absorbed into the language of the river. A mistake
had been made. It wasn't over yet.
© ralph patrick mackay
© ralph patrick mackay
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