"M John Harrison - Isobel Avens Returns To Stepney In The Spring" - читать интересную книгу автора (Harrison John M) Isobel Avens Returns to Stepney in the Spring
a novelette by M John Harrison The third of September this year I spent the evening watching TV in an upstairs flat in North London. Some story of love and transfiguration, cropped into all the wrong proportions for the small screen. The flat wasn't mine. It belonged to a friend I was staying with. There were French posters on the walls, dusty CDs stacked on the old-fashioned sideboard, piles of newspapers subsiding day by day into yellowing fans on the carpet. Outside, Tottenham stretched away, Greek driving schools, Turkish social clubs. Turn the TV off and you could hear nothing. Turn it back on and the film unrolled, passages of guilt with lost edges, photographed in white and blue light. At about half past eleven the phone rang. I picked it up. "Hello?" It was Isobel Avens. "Oh China," she said. She burst into tears. I said: "Can you drive?" "No," she said. I looked at my watch. "I'll come and fetch you." "You can't," she said. "I'm here. You can't come here." I said: "Be outside, love. Just try and get yourself downstairs. Be outside and I'll pick you up on the pavement there." There was a silence. "Can you do that?" "Yes," she said. "Don't try to talk," I advised. London was as quiet as a nursing home corridor. I turned up the car stereo. Tom Waits, "Downtown Train". Music stuffed with sentiments you recognise but daren't admit to yourself. I let the BMW slip down Green Lanes, through Camden into the centre; then west. I was pushing the odd traffic light at orange, clipping the apex off a safe bend here and there. I told myself I wasn't going to get killed for her. What I meant was that if I did she would have no one left. I took the Embankment at eight thousand revs in fifth gear, nosing down heavily on the brakes at Chelsea Wharf to get round into Gunter Grove. No one was there to see. By half past twelve I was on Queensborough Road, where I found her standing very straight in the mercury light outside Alexander's building, the jacket of a Karl Lagerfeld suit thrown across her shoulders and one piece of expensive leather luggage at her feet. She bent into the car. Her face was white and exhausted and her breath stank. The way Alexander had dumped her was as cruel as everything else he did. She had flown back steerage from the Miami clinic reeling from jet lag, expecting to fall into his arms and be loved and comforted. He told her, "As a doctor I don't think I can do any more for you." The ground hadn't just shifted on her: it was out from under her feet. Suddenly she was only his patient again. In the metallic glare of the street lamps, I noticed a stipple of ulceration across her collar bones. I switched on the courtesy light to look closer. Tiny hectic sores, closely spaced. I said: "Christ Isobel." |
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