Wisconsin but moved to London in his early twenties and got a job as a theatrical producer. Heâd already worked extensively off-off Broadway. He met Carrie waiting for a bus on a Sunday afternoon outside the National Portrait Gallery. It was the winter of 1972. He was wearing his duffel coat.
Carrie was a blonde who wore her hair in big curls, had milk-pudding skin and breasts like a roomy verandah on the front of her bodyâs smart Georgian townhouse frame. Close up she smelled like a bowl of Multi-flavoured Cheerios.
Before Jack had even smelled her, though, he smiled at her. She smiled in return, glanced awayâas girls are wont to doâand then glanced back again. Just as heâd hoped, her eyes finally settled on the toggles on his coat. She pointed. She grinned. âYour buttons â¦â
âHuh?â
âThe buttons on your coat. Youâve done them up all wrong.â
He looked down and pretended surprise. âI have?â
Jack held his hands aloft, limply, gave her a watery smile but made no attempt to righten them. Carrie, in turn, put her hand to her curls. She imagined that Jack must be enormously clever to be so vague. Maybe a scientist or a schoolteacher at a boysâ private school or maybe a philosophy graduate. Not for a moment did it dawn on her that he might be a fool. And that was sensible, because he was no fool.
Carrie met Sydney two decades later, while attending self-defence classes. Sydney had long, auburn ringlets and freckles and glasses. She was Australian. Her father owned a vineyard just outside Brisbane. Sydney was a sub-editor on a bridal magazine. She was strong and bare and shockingly independent. On the back of her elbows, Carrie noticed, the skin was especially thick and in the winter she had to apply Vaseline to this area because otherwise her skin chapped and cracked and became inflamed. The reason, Sydney informed Carrie, that her elbows got so chapped, was that she was very prone to resting her weight on them when she sat at her desk, and also, late at night, when she lay in bed reading or thinking, sometimes for hours.
Sydney was thirty years old and an insomniac. Had been since puberty. As a teenager sheâd kept busy during the long night hours memorizing the type-of-grape in the type-of-wine, from-which-vineyard and of-what-vintage. Also she collected wine labels which she stuck into a special jotter.
Nowadays, however, sheâd spend her wakeful night-times thinking about broader subjects: men she met, men she fancied, men sheâd dated, men sheâd two-timed, and if none of these subjects seemed pertinent or topicalâduring the dry season, as she called itâwell, then sheâd think about her friends and their lives and how her life connected with theirs and what they both wanted and what they were doing wrong and how and why.
Carrie appreciated Sydneyâs attentiveness. If Jack had been working late, if Jack kept mentioning the name of an actress, if Jack told her that her skin looked sallow or her roots were showing, well, then she would tell Sydney about it and Sydney would spend the early hours of every morning, resting on her elbows and mulling it all over.
Sydney had a suspicion that Jack was up to something anti-matrimonial and had hinted as much to Carrie. Hinted, but nothing more. Carrie, however, took only what she wanted from Sydneyâs observations and left the rest. In conversational terms, she was a fussy eater.
Jack walked out on Carrie after twenty-one years of marriage, two days before her forty-fourth birthday. The following night, after heâd packed up and gone, she and Sydney skipped their karate class and sat in the leisure centreâs bar instead. Sydney ordered two bottles of Bordeaux. She wasnât in the least bit perturbed by Carrieâs predicament. In fact, she was almost pleased because sheâd anticipated that this would happen a while ago and was secretly gratified
Mary Smith, Rebecca Cartee