Day 106 Intermezzo - a final romantic inerlude
General status update
Anxiety level/insane euphoria (+/- 1-10,000): A
week from now, it’ll be Dexy Time
again!! Yay!! Oh, and there’ll be the final dose of chemo as well, obvs.
Nausea demon:
he’s been doing a little shopping to prepare for his monastic retreat; I think
he’s going to find it hellish cold this weekend in those open-toed sandals.
Despair Demon: He’s
deeply depressed because the Chemo Muse has been ignoring him, and I find
myself trying to cheer him up. WHAT IS WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE?
Chemo Muse:
She’s had me hard at it today – see below. She keeps talking about completing
narrative arcs in the limited time we’ve got left..
Chemo Brian: just
chilling on the sofa with his little woolly rat friend, Chemo Rat Brian.
State of mind:
nostalgic
Hair:
it’s seen better days, frankly, but our current focus is simply on
attachedness, and it’s still scoring 10 out 10 on that front.
Previously on Chemo Nights: After meeting via a mutual friend on
Twitter during a discussion about procrastination, R and I bonded deeply
over our mutual love of the London
Review of Books and have conducted a prolonged epistolary and telephonic
romance, whilst living 2,000 miles apart. After 8 months I have finally agreed
to fly back to London from my home in the Aegean to meet R, but am convinced
that this is all going to end in tears when our virtual romance is exposed to
the cruel light of day. Now read on….
The view from Richmond Hill over the River Thames, winding
its way through a sylvan landscape essentially unchanged since it was laid out
in the 18th century, is one of the most beautiful in London. The
town of Richmond was founded in the early 16th Century, after Henry VII built
Richmond Palace, and during the 18th Century, an Arcadia was re-created along
the Thames below Richmond Hill. Royal
and aristocratic palaces were constructed, with gardens and parks, and linked
by a series of avenues, set within a framework of meadow and woodland.
It is the only view in England to be protected by an Act of
Parliament:
The Richmond, Ham and
Petersham Open Spaces Act was passed in 1902, after a campaign by local
people against development in the area, to protect the land on and below
Richmond Hill and thus preserve the fine foreground views to the west and
south. Immortalised in paintings by Sir Joshua Reynolds and J.M.W. Turner, it
was described by Sir Walter Scott as "an unrivalled landscape". The Terrace Walk, laid out near the top of the hill in the
18th century, gives a panoramic view over south-west London, taking in the
river Thames, royal parks and palaces.
All very fine and all very touristy,
I can hear you thinking, but what’s that got to do with the price of fish?
Be patient, dear Reader, I’m coming to that….
The Terrace Walk on the top of Richmond Hill is one of my
favourite places in the world to walk, or just to sit and look at the
stupendous view; there are dozens of comfortable wooden benches there, each one
bearing a small plaque with the name of someone else who used to love to sit on
Richmond Hill and look at the view, and in whose memory the bench was donated.
When I die, I’d like to be remembered with a bench on Richmond Hill, too (n.b. I’m not being morbid - I have an
excellent prognosis, remember).
I know this place so well because my parents own a flat in
one of the roads of Victorian and Edwardian houses that cover the more gently
sloping ground on the back of Richmond Hill, and I stayed there frequently on
visits back to the UK during the five years I was living in Turkey. It’s only a
five minute walk from the flat up to the Terrace Walk, and I would spend some
time there every day without fail; it’s a place I became addicted to.
So when it came to choosing somewhere for R and I to meet in
real life for the very first time (after
an on-line virtual courtship lasting for 8 months, with no opportunity to meet
as we were living 2,000 miles apart), the Terrace at the top of Richmond Hill
seemed the perfect venue: if the whole thing turned out to be a complete
disaster, and we found ourselves without a word to say to one another, we could
always just look at the view…
I arrived back in the UK for the first time in 3 years in the
early hours of the morning on Sunday, March 27th, 2011; I spent much
of that day wandering around Richmond in a daze, in deep culture shock after
spending such a long period of time living in a converted camel barn in
Ayvalik, a very small Ottoman Greek town, on the north Aegean coast of Turkey,
170km from the nearest big city.
No cobbled streets, no head-scarved
neighbours sitting gossiping endlessly on their doorsteps, no deliveries of
logs by horse and cart, no mutant chickens escaping yet again from my
neighbour’s garden; no competing muezzins calling the faithful to prayer from
the minarets that sit so oddly on the old Greek Orthodox churches converted
into mosques; no exterior sofas for hot summer evenings, no goats, or packs of
wild dogs; no ruined houses occupied by tribes of feral cats, no pide sellers
hawking their wares at the top of their voices; no village ladies in baggy
pantaloons sitting on street corners selling wild greens, or sour plums, or pomegranates,
or buckets of ripe figs…
Much had changed since I last set foot in London, not least
that Marks and Spencer were now selling something called ‘wasabi peas’, a truly
splendid invention. Even the discovery of the amazing hot-yet-sweet taste sensation of the wasabi pea, though, could not
distract me from a rising tide of panic about the following day’s meeting with
R, which I was becoming more and more convinced would be a disaster of truly
epic proportions.
I was too old for this, much too old for this and, more
importantly, some years older than R. He professed not to be the slightest bit
bothered by this, but it still bugged the hell out of me. And I wasn’t nearly
thin enough and my hair looked awful and I didn’t have anything to wear. He
would probably take one look at me and run screaming down the hill towards the
river, and the last I would see of him would be a tiny figure in the far
distance loping across Petersham Meadows, zigzagging from side to side to avoid
the grazing cows….
Several purchases of new items of clothing later, I at least
had an outfit, but still walked back up the hill to the flat enveloped in a
deepening cloud of grim despair.
What had I been thinking, travelling
2,000 miles back to London to meet a strange man off the internet? OK, he was a
Professor of Bioethics, and we had friends in common, and we had spent the last
8 months exchanging hundreds of emails and spending hours conversing on Skype,
but he was still a Strange Man. My mother always told me not to talk to strange
men, and I should have listened to her advice. I’d been perfectly happy on my
own, I had a great life in Ayvalik, I had a LIBRARY, in a CAMEL BARN, for God’s
sake, the library I’d always wanted, and a dog, and 3 cats, and lots of
friends, wasn’t that enough? Why come
all this way and risk humiliation and rejection and a broken heart – hadn’t I
already suffered enough for one lifetime?
There was going to be a long evening to get through alone, as
R and I had arranged to meet at 10 o’clock on Monday morning - giving me Sunday to recover and regroup
after the 15 hour journey from Ayvalik - and given the frame of mind I was in,
there was only possible way to approach it: with a raid on MamaFo’s
exceptionally well-stocked drinks cabinet.
One of my mother’s hobbies - before she retired to her eyrie in the Tramuntana Mountains of Mallorca
to devote herself to Mediterranean gardening and the cultivation of the highest
quality home-grown skunk - was collecting particularly fine bottles of eau
de vie, brandy, aquavit and the like on her travels, and in the flat there were
several large cupboards packed with a world class collection of such beverages,
including my own favourite, Calvados.
In hindsight, dining solely on Calvados and wasabi peas was
probably not a terrific idea, but I was much too agitated to contemplate eating
anything more, or drinking any less. The
spasmodic texting to R of my growing existential despair may have been a bit of
a strategic error, also. R did his best to cheer me up, from a distance, but I
wasn’t in a mood to be cheered.
C: This is so hard,
today has been very difficult for me. This is so not going to work. I don't think we should do this.
R: I’m sorry you’re
feeling bad. I thought you wanted today to get your head together, and
evidently you have, but not in the way I hoped.
C : I’m too old and too
fat for all this, and I have been drinking Calvados, and now I have a RED NOSE.
R: For the record, I
don’t believe you are fat or old or have a red nose.
C: My nose always goes
red, reindeer-like: cold or alcohol, never fails.
R: Also for the record, I am
balding, and round-shouldered, and have a slight stoop. I just want to meet you, to tell you
how much I feel about you, and then you can tell me to f*** off.
C: I am only upset
because I am very, very nervous. When we meet, things will clarify. We are both
a bundle of nerves right now.
R: I want to be kind to
you, to make you happy – even if we never meet again, to give you good
memories.
C: You are going to be
so disappointed – the Tatlim with the Luminous Nose.
R: I am meeting the
woman who has stitched my heart back together, and made me happy for the first
time in years....
C : I have made major
inroads into the wasabi peas, not to mention the Calvados.
R: ...which makes you
Venus Herself.
C : You do say the
loveliest things…
And so to bed. It should have been a
sleepless, anxiety-wrack’d night, but I’d drunk far too much Calvados for that.
This is the view looking up Richmond Hill, from the water meadows by the river, towards the Terrace Walk - you can see Jerry Hall's house on the second left at the top, although Mick's long gone now, obvs..
It seems hard to imagine now, having just lived through the
coldest and snowiest March in living memory, but March and April 2011 were
exceptionally warm and sunny; the next morning was quite blindingly beautiful and
as I walked, very slowly, up Richmond Hill towards the Terrace and my awaiting
doom (R having texted me to say he had already
arrived ), the sun was blazing in a clear blue sky, birds were singing, the
trees were covered in showers of blossom –everything, in short, was wildly,
inappropriately cheerful.
I was carrying a satsuma – or, as they call them in Turkey, mandalins, or as R and I call them, mandolins – something which had become a
bit of a theme between us (you had to be
there, really), had a bit of a hangover, and was now focused with grim
determination on just getting this dreadful, ill-omened event over with and then getting on with the rest of my life, possibly in a discalced Carmelite convent
in Ayacucho, Peru, if they’d have me. There would be llamas, and colourful
ethnic knitwear, and distant, pleasing, mountain prospects whichever way you
looked…
Looking from the end of the terrace I
can see, some fifty yards distant, a man sitting on one of the benches,
reading. He is sitting opposite the telescopes and the viewing platform, which
is where we agreed to meet, so that must be R.
Oh my God, it’s HIM. But still at a
safe distance. The ball of nervousness in my stomach expands and there are a
thousand butterflies in there, fighting madly to get out.
I start walking, even more slowly
now, towards him. It’s 10 a.m. and there’s no one else much around, except a
tramp, an old-fashioned, proper tramp, bushy of beard and wild of hair, clad in
layers of slightly shredded garments, stretched out full length on his side on
one of the benches, propped up on one elbow, and smoking a roll-up with an insouciant air. As I pass
him I wonder if he has been hired by Richmond Council to add picturesqueness to
the scene as the official Tramp of Richmond Hill, like the hermits 18th
century aristocrats used to employ to people their grottoes and follies.
I’m still 25 yards away when R looks
up and sees me, and then he puts down his book and gets up from the bench,
unfolding himself into a very tall person indeed, well over six foot, a tall,
thin man with greying auburn hair and a strong handsome face on which there is
suddenly the biggest smile I have ever seen. I find myself beaming back, and
when we are five yards apart we both say ‘Hello, tatlim’ and then he takes me
in his arms and holds me close in what is possibly the longest hug the world,
and certainly the tramp, has ever seen.
And now he is real and there, after
all this time, and I can feel his mouth
against my hair and the smell of his skin and it is R, just R , exactly the way he ought to be, to
smell, to feel.
‘Here you are’ he says ‘here you are
at last – I’ve been waiting so long’, and he’s not talking about the twenty
minutes he’s been sitting on Richmond Hill.
‘There you are’ I say ‘there you are. You’re real.
You’re here.’
And then he kissed me.
We never did get to look at the view.
Postscript: That meeting on Richmond Hill was
two years ago today. We spent much of the next 3 weeks together, and then I
came back to London again for another 6 weeks during July and August. R and I both knew pretty much right from the
start that we wanted to make a life together, however difficult that might be
to arrange, and I flew back to London for the third time on October 4th,
2011, with 2 suitcases (‘on a wing and a
prayer’ as BigSisFo put it, rolling her eyes in disbelief at my folly). I
wasn’t planning to move in with R straight away, but he dragged me out of
Richmond and into his flat in Hammersmith within 24 hours of arrival, and we’ve
now been living together for 18 months.
It’s been very difficult in many ways, some of which I can’t talk about here;
it hasn’t just been the cancer we’ve had to deal with. All of that
notwithstanding, it’s been the happiest two years of my life.
And now we share just the one
subscription to the London Review of Books, and we keep them in an old wooden
toolbox I brought back with me from Ayvalik…
YES! YES! I've been waiting for this one!
ReplyDeleteAh, I see you waited to post it until the 2-year anniversary...
The trees blossomed that year for you and R.
I had tears in my eyes reading this.
(but CarFo, what happened to MamaFo's bday party - ?)
XXX to you and R.
I still had to go to the birthday party, which meant a four day trip to Mallorca starting that Friday....no one in my family knew there was anything else going on in my life AT ALL, although I did confess to one my stepsisters while I was there, after swearing her to secrecy. MamaFo's 80th birthday extravaganza, although a spectacular success in terms of location, food, drink and entertainment, involved the spontaneous combustion and internecine warfare typical of Fo family celebrations, and I returned to London the following Monday, traumatised,
Deletep.s. I LOVE wasabi peas!
ReplyDeleteThey really are the best thing ever - it was worth returning to the UK just for the wasabi peas. I remain an addict. R sometimes gets me some really heavy duty ones from a Thai delicatessen, and they're even better than the M&S ones.
DeleteGosh. That's lovely. Thank you for that. Do you remember, in the Narnia books, when Lucy reads a story from the wizard's book meant for the refreshment of the spirit? That's what this post did.
ReplyDelete-Jenertia
Thank you - what a lovely thing to say xx
DeleteHave just read this, with my morning coffee. Is early here and the birds are singing like mad. And I am the only one up. This is my special time. And I am so grateful to be able to enjoy it again. And this post topped Juan Valdez's best.
ReplyDeleteLovely, Caroline...just lovely.
Thank you.
Jen
Well done, CarFo, and well done, R!
ReplyDelete