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Authors: Tim Parks

Juggling the Stars

BOOK: Juggling the Stars
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Copyright © 1990, 2011 by Tim Parks

All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without the express written consent of the publisher, except in the case of brief excerpts in critical reviews or articles. All inquiries should be addressed to Arcade Publishing, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018.

Arcade Publishing books may be purchased in bulk at special discounts for sales promotion, corporate gifts, fund-raising, or educational purposes. Special editions can also be created to specifications. For details, contact the Special Sales Department, Arcade Publishing, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018 or
[email protected]
.

Arcade Publishing® is a registered trademark of Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.®, a Delaware corporation.

First published in Great Britain under the title
Cara Massimina
by Hodder and Stoughton Ltd.

First published in the United States by Grove Press

This is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters, and incidents are either products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously.

Visit our website at
www.arcadepub.com
.

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available on file.

ISBN: 978-1-61145-637-0

 

A
LSO BY
T
IM
P
ARKS

Fiction
Tongues of Flame
Loving Roger
Home Thoughts
Family Planning
Goodness
Shear
Mimi's Ghost
Europa
Destiny

Nonfiction
Italian Neighbors
An Italian Education
Adultery and Other Diversions

1

Morris walked across the square faster than he would have liked. The twilight had a curious liquidity about it that had to do with the freshness after an afternoon's rain and the way first streetlamps stared into the dying daylight. It wasn't a moment to hurry, Morris thought. It was a moment to loll outside a bar sipping a glass of white wine and feeling the space between things, their weight, their presence. It was a moment to watch the shadows sharpening slowly and coolly as daylight bled away and the lamplight strengthened - to watch the colours die on stuccoed walls when the bright neon stabbed out beneath. A magic moment.

But Morris hurried on, across the square and into the maze of narrow streets beyond. He was quite out of breath with hurrying. It was the fourth time across the city in as many hours. Certainly he'd arranged things badly today, he thought. Getting wet like that between Paola's and Patrizia's. His right foot was cold and damp in its shoe and his trousers too were soggy and flapping around the bottoms. Morris stopped a moment to gather his breath, then leaned on the bell. He gave it a good hard ring. At the same time his lips slowly and clearly formed the word ‘Drudge'. He repeated it out loud, ‘Drudge!' trying to roll the V, but it was difficult. He tried again, then switched to ‘boring,' where by now he had the rolled V off to absolute perfection. ‘Borr-rrrring.' He leaned on the bell again. Damn them!

Morris was standing outside a huge arched gate of blackened wood and now the little loudspeaker under a row of bells in the stone wall beside, finally crackled into life.

‘Chi e?'

‘Morris.'

A pause.

‘Chi?'

‘Morris,' He drew a breath as one who is preparing to confess. 'The English teacher,' The words, quite seriously, were dust and ashes on Morris's lips.

‘Ah, fill just see if Gregorio's in.'

Of course he was in, dammit! It was time for his lesson. Otherwise the English teacher wouldn't have come, would he? So why didn't she open right away? Suspicious race they were! Morris glanced impatiently at his watch. Ten to six. He was going to have to hurry after this one too.

A sharp buzz snapped open the lock. Morris pushed his way in and, barely glancing at the courtyard where a fountain in delightfully deep shadow splashed over naked fauns, he hurried, faster than he would have liked, up the marble stairs. Always faster than he would have liked. Which meant that when Signora Ferroni opened the door his Italian was less perfect than it might have been from trying to catch his breath. She smiled sympathetically and he felt humiliated. She was dressed in wonderful taste in a soft grey wool dress; her posture was perfectly elegant, her make-up lawless and manners likewise. Could she offer him something to drink? Tea, orange juice? No, she couldn't. Morris, feeling scruffy, refused. He had an acute sensation his hair must be in a terrible mess.

Gregorio arrived, all hair oil and the adolescent's love affair with aftershave, and led him into the sitting room where they sat opposite each other over a glass table under a frescoed ceiling. Morris reached for his books from his leather document case only to discover that that was wet too. He must get some cream or something to treat the leather. It was the only beautiful thing he had. The pages of the book were damp.

‘What did you do at the weekend, Gregorio?' - the opening gambit of every Monday lesson: asked it five hundred times today already. He felt weary and trivial.

‘I went to the mountain,'

'The mountains. We don't use the singular unless we're referring to a specific mountain,'

‘I went to the mountains,'

‘How did you get there?'

‘Who with?'

‘What for?'

‘Where exactly?'

‘What did you have to eat?'

‘What was the weather like?'

‘How much did it all cost?'

‘Did you enjoy yourself?'

‘When did you get back?'

Gregorio had been skiing it seems. He'd gone up in his father's Alfa Romeo to Val Gardena where the family had a second or third or perhaps even fourth house and he'd spent the night there with his friend. ‘Me and my fr-riend,' he grinned, delighted as Italians always were that the word didn't oblige you to declare whether male or female - as if Morris could give the most piddling of piddling damns whether Gregorio's trip had come complete with sexual experience or not! All the same, he smiled brightly back at his student. The weekend routine was worth a good ten easy minutes when all was said and done, which was 166 (recurring) per cent of the whole hour, or exactly two thousand five hundred of the fifteen thousand lire he was going to get paid for this lesson, because he asked the rich ones for more.

They switched to Gregorio's schoolbooks. The final school exams were near at hand and Gregorio's future hung in the balance. He had already been sent back a year once and he must get through this time. Morris was encouraging. They would make it together, he said. Where were they now? Ah yes. Out of the corner of one eye he looked at a fresco behind the cocktail bar where a goddess was twisting herself around a slender tree trunk. To his right a small bronze dryad paraded on a pedestal, arms uplifted and breasts stretched tight in a gesture of triumph. The place must be worth millions-, Morris thought - of lire, billions - and this poor lad was sweating over his exams as if they could possibly matter. If he'd had half enough intelligence to pass them he'd have seen how utterly insignificant they were in the shadow of all this wealth.

They read a set passage from
The Old Curiosity Shop,
 where the old man and Nell, homeless and hungry, take shelter in a factory full of monstrous machines and sleep in the ashes of yesterday's coal. Gregorio's well-to-do pink tongue stumbled over the difficult words, as well it might.

The boy's mustard shirt was from Standa, Morris noticed, the Marks & Sparks of Northern Italy. Was there no limit to the economies of the rich? Morris stopped for a moment and studied his watch shamelessly. Five minutes to go. He was trying to hold back what would be a truly thunderous fart.

Finished. Morris slipped his book off the table and down into the document case. The leather really was going to require some attention. It was the only thing that gave him any appearance of being professional, scuttling round from one place to the next through puddles and cobbles as he did. He sat up now, perfectly straight and immobile, placed one hand calmly over the other on the table and smiled, eyebrows lifted interrogatively in what he knew was an attractive expression. Gregorio responded with his usual, elegant, aftershaved blankness, while on a dark canvas behind him Christ had been quite savagely crucified by some fourteenth-century painter. The only whiff of bad taste, Morris thought, but it was probably a family heirloom. Inwardly he began to count if only to see how long it would take the boy to catch on. Ten, eleven, twelve …' Every second stepped up the pressure in groaning intestines and was a breath faster he'd have to hurry back across town again in sodden shoes; but there could be no question whatsoever of leaving first, even if he had to sink to asking the boy what date it was. Twenty. two, twenty-three …' Should he shout thirty-first out loud?

‘Ah, I should pay you, it's the end of the month,' Gregorio cried and dashed off to speak to his mother. A maid crossed the room with an armload of brooms and eyed Morris suspiciously. She had heard the word ‘pay' perhaps. Morris had no difficulty rewarding her with the frankest of frank smiles, a
‘Buona sera
, Signora,' and even a small bow of his blond head. They were on the same side after all. But the woman clattered tightlipped into the kitchen. Next thing, Morris thought, she'd be urinating in the corners to show it was her territory. Stupid old cow. They'd probably made her think she was part of the family or something.

Gregorio rushed back. Outside his lessons everything was all go obviously. In a big hurry to get out and see his ‘f-friend' most probably. And in his hand was a cheque. Of all things. Sixty thousand lire and they paid you with a cheque! What did they want? For him to start paying his taxes or something? Or was he supposed to offer a reduction if they paid him in cash?
BANCO NAZIONALE DEL LAVORO
. At least five days before they'd clear it, naturally. Morris took the cheque, baring his teeth in a savage smile that left Gregorio not at all crestfallen. Then he was at the door, with the signora mother crying
arrivederci
over a wailing television.

‘Buona sera, Signora.'

Gregorio said: ‘By the way, well have to miss this Friday because I'm off to Cortina.'

Fifteen thousand lire lost in the frozen alpine snows.

‘Never mind. Monday then. Enjoy yourself!' Damn you. And he was scuttling off down the stairs already to where that fountain now played away in a subtle web of spotlight beams, catching a faun's flanks here in a shower of silver, there his stony face, and one beam held the shining drops at the very apex of their parabola. Morris gave it the fart. He felt like spitting. ‘Drrrrudge!' God, that 'r' was tough to roll. ‘Drrrrudges bear grrrrudges.' He turned into Via Quattro Spade, Via Mazzini, Vicolo San Nicole, walking briskly back to the school and the last hour. What did you do at the weekend, how did you get there, who with, what for, where exactly, what did you have to eat, what was the weather like, how much did it all cost, did you enjoy yourself, when did you come back? Monday lessons almost over.

Later, Morris stood at the bus stop on Stradone San Fermo and clenched his teeth tight, as if defying wind and rain, though there was none. It wasn't a night for seeing Massimina, he thought not with trousers wet and shoes scuffed and his beautiful document case rather the worse for wear and tear. He had sent some flowers earlier in the day, so she could hardly complain, and then he could always ring her when he got home. That should give the impression of the earnest suitor, wiped out after a day's slog and still hanging on the end of the phone to hear all the sweet gossip of his
signorina fidanzata
. He had made a good start there, Morris thought. It could be the one.

‘Hi man, Morris buddy! What you up to?'

The tongue was English - or rather American. On a ramshackle bicycle, displaying no lights, a bearded young man wobbled dangerously across the street, knees splayed out wide to get his feet on the pedals. Morris was annoyed.

BOOK: Juggling the Stars
6.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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