The Temporary

Free The Temporary by Rachel Cusk

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Authors: Rachel Cusk
him on his own, her manner cool and confusing with discretion, and afterwards she would sometimes strokehis hair. He was grateful for it, of course, for he had little money of his own – just what his father had left him in a policy for his weekly upkeep, the rest to be collected when he came of age – and Stephen always liked to do expensive things when they were in London. Lady Sparks seemed to know just when his supplies were dwindling, and having learnt the secret of her acuity Ralph cultivated a slightly fearful respect for her. She was a small and elegant woman, so unlike the memory he had of his own mother, with a distracted, aristocratic voice and the redundant manners, the despairing aloofness, of a displaced, abandoned queen. She could unnerve Ralph if he was left alone with her for too long without the emboldening presence of Stephen’s bravado, by looking at him so blankly that he thought she was mad. He knew Stephen had had a brother when he was very young who had fallen out of their car on a motorway and died, and although he sometimes thought that Lady Sparks perhaps liked him because of the brother, and might even want to adopt him as a replacement, the sight of her pale, empty eyes told him that she didn’t feel that way at all. Stephen would do imitations of her when they were on their own, rolling his eyes back into his head and speaking in a feeble, effeminate voice until Ralph cried with guilty laughter. He said that his father had divorced her so that he could marry his French girlfriend Isobelle, with whom he now lived in a big house in the French countryside. Stephen went to stay with them sometimes during the summer and Ralph would have to go to London alone, where he crept nervously through the great, cool rooms to avoid the drifting ghost of Lady Sparks and more often than not kept to his bedroom and read during the hot days. Usually it was only for a week or two, though, and while Stephen would often say that he was going for Easter or Christmas, or for the two whole months of the summer, when the time came more often than not something ‘came up’ andhe didn’t go. Ralph had never met Stephen’s father, or Isobelle, whom Stephen used to describe to the boys at school, claiming that he had once hidden in a wardrobe in their bedroom and watched them having sex through a crack in the door. They had two small children with French names which Ralph couldn’t remember.
    They would usually go to Camden in a black cab hailed in the street by Stephen. Ralph would sit in it, filled with the inebriation of awe and with a sense of how randomly this grace had fallen upon him, how little it had to do with anything that had happened to him before. He wondered now if his own occasional but nevertheless illogical habit of taking cabs existed in deference to those cloistered journeys, which he looked back on amazed that his younger self had felt no embarrassment when emerging from them into the cheerful anarchy of Camden High Street. The area had a significance for him, though, which he did not wish to escape: they had sat in pubs, had looked at people unlike themselves, had bought records and even ‘scored’, as they had called it, from skinny fetid men in the street – not like now, Ralph thought, when Stephen seemed to have a minion for every drug he used, a book full of telephone numbers to be dialled at all times, the late-night ringing of the bell. Stephen had used to ‘skin up’, another phrase which now seemed foreign to him but which once he had had tamed on his tongue, in broad daylight, and Ralph would take panicked nips at it, not really feeling anything. It couldn’t have been very good, he thought now. He had taken things since which had made him feel so far inside himself that his voice was like a megaphone in the pit of his stomach trying to project things out of his mouth.
    He smiled as he trudged over Camden Lock with the two bags of shopping he had bought at great but unheeded

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