Iris Murdoch - Bruno’s Dream
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- Название:Bruno’s Dream
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He had no particular pangs of conscience about Adelaide. He thought that one should do what one wanted on the whole so long as one did not make people unhappy, and he saw no reason why he should make Adelaide unhappy. She was at the age when women need the reassurance of being wanted. He had no idea whether she liked going to bed with him but he knew that she was in love with him and had been from almost the first moment when she arrived in answer to his advertisement. Bruno was just beginning to be ill. It had been a long business with poor old Bruno. Adelaide was useful and her cousin Nigel the Nurse had become indispensable. It never occurred to him, or he imagined to Adelaide, that there was any question of marriage. It was not that sort of relationship. But he had begun to feel that he was getting old and had reached resting point. Adelaide suited him. He promised to support her in her old age. He got into bed with her every night, slightly drunk, and was perfectly happy.
Adelaide, though putting on weight and no longer very young, was really rather beautiful, as Danby came to see after he had been going to bed with her for some time. She was heavy about the hips and stomach but her shoulders and breasts were classical. She had a round face and a naturally rosy complexion and a great deal of long hair of a rich brown colour. (Her hair was dyed, only Danby had never realized this.) Her tendency to overdress-such a change from Linda-gave her for him a sort of exotic almost Oriental charm. Adelaide clinked and rattled with accoutrements, rustled with frills. Her wide-apart brown eyes worshipped him as she coiled the straight abundant hair into an artful bun. Her flat South London voice was to him an infinitely sexy mating call.
Danby hiccuped. It was raining outside with a gentle friendly pissing sound. It was his evening for drinking with Gaskin at the Raven. He had had a bit too much as usual. He was lying on his back with his knees up. He liked to lie on his back like that, it gave him a relaxed happy feeling. Ade laide had just switched out the light and now she was up against him, glued to his side like Eve. He could see the hump of his knees outlined against the thin curtains which glowed faintly with the light of the street lamp which shone into the yard. He and Adelaide slept in the semi-basement annex which a previous owner had built onto the house in Stadium Street in days when the neighbourhood was a good deal less seedy than it had since become. Danby was solaced by its seediness. The neat pretty house in Notting Hill had been Gwen’s house, Gwen’s territory. Danby had fled from it and after years in lodgings had bought the Stadium Street house because it was so different, so shabby. And of course it was near the printing works. He loved the little yard outside his window, below ground level, always dark and covered in slippery green moss. It was always called “the yard,” never “the garden” although it had a yellow privet bush and a laurel bush and a rose that had reverted to brier. The soil was black and no grass would grow on it, only a few dandelions and weedy marigolds which struggled up each year through the damp crust of the moss. The chimneys of Lots Road power station towered above, suitable extensions of that murky infertile earth.
The printing works were situated on the other side of the Thames in Battersea, upon the water’s edge, almost directly opposite the municipal wharf beside the power station, and every day Danby crossed Battersea Bridge into another territory, equally dirty and seedy, but different, smelling of cattle cakes and brewing and watery flotsam. Gwen’s dowry was still a source of joy to Danby. He loved the works, the clattering noise, the papery dust, the tribal independence of the printers, he loved the basic stuff of the trade, the clean-cut virginal paper, the virile elemental lead. As a child he had preferred melting his lead soldiers to parading them, and the manufacture of letters out of lead was an occupation that never ceased to satisfy. He was fond of the machines, especially the older simpler ones, and took pride in the precarious multifarious domestic economy which constantly and only just kept the concern from foundering in its own antiquity. He occasionally went into Chelsea, at least he got as far along the embankment as the King’s Arms, and more occasionally he took Adelaide to a smart Kings Road restaurant, because she liked that, but he never felt at home over that particular border. Fulham, Battersea, where he knew every public house, this was the London on whose mystery he meditated. He was relieved when Bruno stopped urging him to move. He did not like disagreeing with the old man. They had always got on so well together.
”Warm enough, Adelaide?”
”Yes.”
”Your hair’s all cool. Funny stuff, human hair. If you love me never cut your hair off.”
”Shove over a bit, would you.”
”Have I got a clean shirt for tomorrow? The Bowater chaps are coming.”
”Of course you have.”
”Did you hear the six-o’clock news? What’s the river up to?”
”Another flood warning.”
”I hope we won’t have it in the back yard like we did two years ago.”
”Did you have a nice day?”
”Yes, fine. Did you? How was the old chap?”
”Same as usual. He was on about Miles again.”
”Oh.”
”Talking about seeing him.”
”Just talk.”
”Well, I think he ought to see Miles. He is his son.”
”Nonsense, Adelaide. There’d be no point after all these years. They’d have nothing to say. They’d just upset each other. By the way, did you remember to lock up the stamps?”
”Yes.”
Danby did really think there was no point in his seeing Miles. It was not just that Danby hoped to get the stamps. Though of course he did hope to get the stamps. Anybody would.
”Do you think he’s getting senile?”
”Certainly not, Adelaide. He gets confused sometimes, but his mind’s very clear really.”
”He will talk so about spiders. I think he imagines them.”
”I suspect he attracts them. Have you noticed how his room is always full of spiders?”
”Horrid things! How long do you think he’ll last?”
”He sinks under a complication of disorders. Could be ages though.”
”You said he wouldn’t talk business anymore and it was a bad sign.”
”Maybe. But he’s got a terrific will to live, poor old fellow.”
”I can’t see why anyone would want to go on living when they’ve got like that. Whatever can he look forward to?”
”The next drink.”
”Well, you would! I think old age is awful. I hope I’ll never be old.”
”When you are old, Adelaide, you will find that life is just as desirable as it is now.”
”My auntie’s senile. She’s got completely gaga. She thinks she’s a Russian princess. She talks some sort of gibberish she thinks is Russian.”
”Funny how mad people go for titles. By the way, is your other cousin still out of work?”
”Will Boase! He’s not even trying to get work! He just draws National Assistance. They give them too much.”
”He could do that painting job for us. He needn’t tell the National Assistance people.”
”He went to grammar school. So did Nigel.”
”I daresay, Adelaide, but I’m afraid I haven’t any intellectual work to offer him just at the moment!”
”He ought to be in a proper job. You paid him far too much last time.”
”Well, one likes to help. He’s quite unlike Nigel, isn’t he. It’s odd to think they’re twins.”
”They’re not identical twins. I wish you hadn’t got Nigel to work here. It wasn’t my idea.”
”Well, that was not for charity. He’s terribly good with Bruno. It’s almost uncanny.”
”What are Bruno and he always talking about?”
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