I became Tommyโs carer almost a year to the day after that trip to see the boat. It wasnโt long after Tommyโs third donation, and though he was recovering well, he was still needing a lot of time to rest, and as it turned out, that wasnโt a bad way at all for us to start this new phase together.
Before long, I was getting used to the Kingsfield, growing to like it even.
Most donors at the Kingsfield get their own room after third donation, and Tommy was given one of the largest singles in the centre. Some people assumed afterwards Iโd fixed it for him, but that wasnโt the case; it was just luck, and anyway, it wasnโt that great a room. I think it had been a bathroom back in the holiday camp days, because the only window had frosted glass and was really high up near the ceiling. You could only look out by standing on a chair and holding open the pane, and then you only got a view down onto the dense shrubbery. The room was L-shaped, which meant they could get in, as well as the usual bed, chair and wardrobe, a little school desk with a lift-up lidโan item that proved a real bonus, as Iโll explain.
I donโt want to give the wrong idea about that period at the Kingsfield. A lot of it was really relaxed, almost idyllic. My usual time to arrive was after lunch, and Iโd come up to find Tommy stretched out on the narrow bedโalways fully clothed because he didnโt want to โbe like a patient.โ Iโd sit in the chair and read to him from various paperbacks Iโd bring in, stuff likeย The Odysseyย orย One Thousand and One Nights. Otherwise weโd just talk, sometimes about the old days, sometimes about other things. Heโd often doze off in the late afternoon, when Iโd catch up on my reports over at his school desk. It was amazing really, the way the years seemed to melt away, and we were so easy with each other.
Obviously, though, not everything was like before. For a start, Tommy and I finally started having s*x. I donโt know how much Tommy had thought about us having s*x before we started. He was still recovering, after all, and maybe it wasnโt the first thing on his mind. I wasnโt wanting to force it on him, but on the other hand it had occurred to me if we left it too long, just when we were starting out together again, it
would just get harder and harder to make it a natural part of us. And my other thought, I suppose, was that if our plans went along the lines Ruth had wanted, and we did find ourselves going for a deferral, it might prove a real drawback if weโd never had s*x. I donโt mean I thought this was necessarily something theyโd ask us about. But my worry was that it would show somehow, in a kind of lack of intimacy.
So I decided to start it off one afternoon up in that room, in a way he could take or leave. Heโd been lying on the bed as usual, staring at the ceiling while I read to him. When I finished, I went over, sat on the edge of the bed, and slid a hand under his T-shirt. Pretty soon I was down around his stuff, and though it took a while for him to get hard, I could tell straight away he was happy about it. That first time, we still had stitches to worry about, and anyway, after all the years of knowing each other and not having s*x, it was like we needed some intermediary stage before we could get into it in a full-blown way. So after a while I just did it for him with my hands, and he just lay there not making any attempt to feel me up in return, not even making any noises, but just looking peaceful.
But even that first time, there was something there, a feeling, right there alongside our sense that this was a beginning, a gateway we were passing through. I didnโt want to acknowledge it for a long time, and even when I did, I tried to persuade myself it was something that would go away along with his various aches and pains. What I mean is, right from that first time, there was something in Tommyโs manner that was tinged with sadness, that seemed to say: โYes, weโre doing this now and Iโm glad weโre doing it now. But what a pity we left it so late.โ
And in the days that followed, when we had proper s*x and we were really happy about it, even then, this same nagging feeling would always be there. I did everything to keep it away. I had us going at it all stops out, so that everything would become a delirious blur, and thereโd be no room for anything else. If he was on top, Iโd put my knees right up for him; whatever other position we used, Iโd say anything, do anything I thought would make it better, more passionate, but it still never quite went away.
Maybe it was to do with that room, the way the sun came in through the frosted glass so that even in early summer, it felt like autumn light. Or
maybe it was because the stray sounds that would occasionally reach us as we lay there were of donors milling about, going about their business around the grounds, and not of students sitting in a grassy field, arguing about novels and poetry. Or maybe it had to do with how sometimes, even after weโd done it really well and were lying in each otherโs arms, bits of what weโd just done still drifting through our heads, Tommy would say something like: โI used to be able to do it twice in a row easy. But I canโt any more.โ Then that feeling would come right to the fore and Iโd have to put my hand over his mouth, whenever he said things like that, just so we could go on lying there in peace. Iโm sure Tommy felt it too, because weโd always hold each other very tight after times like that, as though that way weโd manage to keep the feeling away.
For the first few weeks after I arrived, we hardly brought up Madame or that conversation with Ruth in the car that day. But the very fact of my having become his carer served as a reminder that we werenโt there to mark time. And so too, of course, did Tommyโs animal drawings.
Iโd often wondered about Tommyโs animals over the years, and even that day weโd gone to see the boat, Iโd been tempted to ask him about them. Was he still drawing them? Had he kept the ones from the Cottages? But the whole history around them had made it difficult for me to ask.
Then one afternoon, maybe about a month after Iโd started, I came up to his room and found him at his school desk, carefully going over a drawing, his face nearly touching the paper. Heโd called for me to come in when Iโd knocked, but now he didnโt raise his head or stop what he was doing, and just a glance told me he was working on one of his imaginary creatures. I stopped in the doorway, uncertain whether I should come in, but eventually he looked up and closed his notebookโ which I noticed looked identical to the black books heโd got from Keffers all those years ago. I came in then and we began talking about something else entirely, and after a while he put away his notebook
without us mentioning it. But after that, Iโd often come in and see it left on the desk or tossed beside his pillow.
Then one day we were up in his room with several minutes to kill before we set off for some checks, and I noticed something odd coming into his manner: something coy and deliberate which made me think he was after some s*x. But then he said:
โKath, I just want you to tell me. Tell me honestly.โ
Then the black notebook came out of his desk, and he showed me three separate sketches of a kind of frogโexcept with a long tail as though a part of it had stayed a tadpole. At least, thatโs what it looked like when you held it away from you. Close up, each sketch was a mass of minute detail, much like the creatures Iโd seen years before.
โThese two I did thinking they were made of metal,โ he said. โSee, everythingโs got shiny surfaces. But this one here, I thought Iโd try making him rubbery. You see? Almost blobby. I want to do a proper version now, a really good one, but I canโt decide. Kath, be honest, what do you think?โ
I canโt remember what I answered. What I do remember is the strong mix of emotions that engulfed me at that moment. I realised immediately this was Tommyโs way of putting behind us everything that had happened around his drawings back at the Cottages, and I felt relief, gratitude, sheer delight. But I was aware too why the animals had emerged again, and of all the possible layers behind Tommyโs apparently casual query. At the least, I could see, he was showing me he hadnโt forgotten, even though weโd hardly discussed anything openly; he was telling me he wasnโt complacent, and that he was busy getting on with his part of the preparations.
But that wasnโt all I felt looking at those peculiar frogs that day. Because it was there again, only faint and in the background at first, but growing all the while, so that afterwards it was what I kept thinking about. I couldnโt help it, as I looked at those pages, the thought went through my mind, even as I tried to grab it and put it away. It came to me that Tommyโs drawings werenโt as fresh now. Okay, in many ways these frogs were a lot like what Iโd seen back at the Cottages. But something was definitely gone, and they looked laboured, almost like theyโd been
copied. So that feeling came again, even though I tried to keep it out: that we were doing all of this too late; that thereโd once been a time for it, but weโd let that go by, and there was something ridiculous, reprehensible even, about the way we were now thinking and planning.
Now Iโm going over this again, it occurs to me that might have been another reason we were so slow to talk openly to each other about our plans. It was certainly the case that none of the other donors at the Kingsfield were ever heard talking about deferrals or anything like that, and we were probably vaguely embarrassed, almost like we shared a shameful secret. We might even have been scared of what might happen if word got out to the others.
But as I say, I donโt want to paint too gloomy a view of that time at the Kingsfield. For a lot of it, especially after that day he asked me about his animals, there seemed to be no more shadows left from the past, and we really settled into each otherโs com-pany. And though he never asked me again for advice about his pictures, he was happy to work on them in front of me, and weโd often spend our afternoons like that: me on the bed, maybe reading aloud; Tommy at the desk, drawing.
Perhaps weโd have been happy if things had stayed that way for a lot longer; if we could have whiled away more afternoons chatting, having s*x, reading aloud and drawing. But with the summer drawing to an end, with Tommy getting stronger, and the possibility of notice for his fourth donation growing ever more distinct, we knew we couldnโt keep putting things off indefinitely.
It had been an unusually busy period for me, and Iโd not been to the Kingsfield for almost a week. I arrived in the morning that day, and I remember it was bucketing down. Tommyโs room was almost dark, and you could hear a gutter splashing away near his window. Heโd been down to the main hall for breakfast with his fellow donors, but had come back up again and was now sitting on his bed, looking vacant, not doing
anything. I came in exhaustedโIโd not had a proper nightโs sleep for agesโand just collapsed onto his narrow bed, pushing him against the wall. I lay like that for a few moments, and might easily have fallen asleep if Tommy hadnโt kept prodding my knees with a toe. Then finally I sat up beside him and said:
โI saw Madame yesterday, Tommy. I never spoke to her or anything. But I saw her.โ
He looked at me, but stayed quiet.
โI saw her come up the street and go into her house. Ruth got it right. The right address, right door, everything.โ
Then I described to him how the previous day, since I was down on the south coast anyway, Iโd gone to Littlehampton in the late afternoon, and just as Iโd done the last two times, walked down that long street near the seafront, past rows of terraced houses with names like โWavecrestโ and โSea View,โ until Iโd come to the public bench beside the phone box.
And Iโd sat down and waitedโagain, the way Iโd done beforeโwith my eyes fixed on the house over the street.
โIt was just like detective stuff. The previous times, Iโd sat there for over half an hour each go, and nothing, absolutely nothing. But something told me Iโd be lucky this time.โ
Iโd been so tired, Iโd nearly nodded off right there on the bench. But then Iโd looked up and she was there, coming down the street towards me.
โIt was really spooky,โ I said, โbecause she looked exactly the same. Maybe her face was slightly older. But otherwise, there was no real difference. Same clothes even. That smart grey suit.โ
โIt couldnโtย literallyย have been the same suit.โ โI donโt know. It looked like it was.โ
โSo you didnโt try and speak to her?โ
โOf course not, stupid. Just one step at a time. She was never exactly nice to us, remember.โ
I told him how sheโd walked right past me on the opposite side, never glancing over to me; how for a second I thought she would also go past the door Iโd been watchingโthat Ruth had got the wrong address. But Madame had turned sharply at the gate, covered the tiny front path in two or three steps and vanished inside.
After Iโd finished, Tommy stayed quiet for some time. Then he said:
โYou sure you wonโt get into trouble? Always driving out to places youโre not supposed to be?โ
โWhy do you think Iโm so tired? Iโve been working all kinds of hours to get everything in. But at least weโve found her now.โ
The rain kept splashing outside. Tommy turned onto his side and put his head on my shoulder.
โRuth did well for us,โ he said, softly. โShe got it right.โ โYeah, she did well. But now itโs up to us.โ
โSo whatโs the plan, Kath? Have we got one?โ
โWe just go there. We just go there and ask her. Next week, when I take you for the lab tests. Iโll get you signed out for the whole day. Then we can go to Littlehampton on the way back.โ
Tommy gave a sigh and put his head deeper into my shoulder. Someone watching might have thought he was being unenthusiastic, but I knew what he was feeling. Weโd been thinking about the deferrals, the theory about the Gallery, all of it, for so longโand now, suddenly, here we were. It was definitely a bit scary.
โIf we get this,โ he said, eventually. โJust suppose we do. Suppose she lets us have three years, say, just to ourselves. What do we do exactly? See what I mean, Kath? Where do we go? We canโt stay here, this is a centre.โ
โI donโt know, Tommy. Maybe sheโll tell us to go back to the Cottages. But itโd be better somewhere else. The White Mansion, maybe. Or
perhaps theyโve got some other place. Somewhere separate for people like us. Weโll just have to see what she says.โ
We lay quietly on the bed for a few more minutes, listening to the rain. At some stage, I began prodding him with a foot, the way heโd been doing to me earlier. Eventually he retaliated and pushed my feet off the bed altogether.
โIf weโre really going,โ he said, โweโll have to decide about the animals. You know, choose the best ones to take along. Maybe six or seven. Weโll have to do it quite carefully.โ
โOkay,โ I said. Then I stood up and stretched out my arms. โMaybe weโll take more. Fifteen, twenty even. Yeah, weโll go and see her. What can she do to us? Weโll go and talk to her.โ