simply from a professional reading of signs you donât even know you exhibit. He had a wife once; she was a girl heâd gone about with since they were schoolchildren, and she died of meningitis when she was younger than I am now. There are still traycloths in the house on which she embroidered her initials.
Graham defends many people on political charges and is one of a handful of advocates who ignore the possible consequences of getting a reputation for being willing to take such cases. Iâve got my job analysing stools for tapeworm and urine for bilharzia and blood for cholesterol (at the Institute for Medical Research). And so we keep our hands clean. So far as work is concerned, at least. Neither of us makes money out of cheap labour or performs a service confined to people of a particular colour. For myself, thank God shit and blood are all the same, no matter whom they come from.
In Europe last year, we enjoyed ourselves very much, and lived in the same room, the same bed, in easy intimacy. We each went our own way someof the time, but weâd planned the holiday together and we stayed together for the greater part. I donât think we once felt irritated with each other. Yet since weâve been back weâve lived again just as we used to, sometimes not sleeping together for two weeks, each taking up large tracts of life where the other has no claim. I didnât need him, sitting in the sun on my balcony.
A sexual connection. But there is more to it than that. A love affair? Less than that. Iâm not suggesting itâs a new form of relationship, of course, but rather that itâs made up of the bits of old ones that donât work. Itâs decent enough; harms nobody, not even ourselves. I suppose Graham would marry me, if I wanted it. Perhaps he wants it; and then it would all change. If I wanted a man, here, at this time, in this country, could I find a better one? He doesnât act, thatâs true; but he doesnât give way, and thatâs not bad, in a deadlock. He lives white, but whatâs the point of the gesture of living any other way? He will survive his own convictions, he will do what he sets out to do, he will keep whatever promises he makes. When I talk with him about history or politics I am aware of the magnetic pull of his mind to the truth. One canât get at it,
but to have some idea where it is
! Yet when heâs inside me â last night â thereâs the strangest thing. Heâs much better than someone my own age, he comes to me with a solidand majestic erection that will last as long as we choose. Sometimes he will be in me for an hour and I can put my hand on my belly and feel the blunt head, like a standard upheld, through my flesh. But while he fills me, while youâd think the last gap in me was closed for ever, while we lie there silent I get the feeling that I am the one who has drawn him up into my flesh, I am the one who holds him there, that I am the one who has him, helpless. If I flex the muscles inside me itâs as if I were throttling someone. He doesnât speak; the suffering of pleasure shuts his eyes, the lids are tender without his glasses. And even when he brings about the climax for us â afterwards I am still holding him as if strangled: warm, thick, dead, inside.
Thatâs how it is.
But I donât think of it often; and sitting on my balcony in the midday sun that cannot possibly be called âwinterâ, it simply took a place in my consciousness (I was growing drowsy from the dry warmth) with the pigeons toeing their way along the guttering, two children I couldnât see, but could hear shooting water pistols at each other, below my feet, and the men on the bit of grass above the pavement opposite. They were black men with their delivery bicycles, or in working overalls. They lay flung down upon the grass, the legends of firms across their backs. They were drinking beer outof the big red