Ben


from the ABC set Remembering

The last time I saw Ben, I helped him wash his hair. I have no idea why he couldn’t do it himself. He wanted to look smart when he went through immigration once he arrived in the States – maybe that’s why? They are legendary for making things difficult for someone if they don’t like the way you look. I can’t remember why he was going, or how he managed to get the money together for it either. I have no memory of Ben ever having a job.

It wasn’t that long after Joel died. We never slept together again after than time in Marnie’s flat - that had been a little bubble of comfort seeking for both of us. I don’t think we even ended it consciously – like you would even a very short relationship; we just left when she came home.

After the memorial service, Ben and I spent a lot of time at Stephen’s flat. We just kind of attached ourselves to him and all played house together. He had recently moved into a big flat – half a house really – in West Hampstead.

There was a jolly, elderly couple downstairs – they were so kind, smiling when they saw us, never minding the constant stream of visitors, the music all night. They were just pleased to see the house come to life again. Their family had grown up and moved away and I think they liked the hustle and bustle we brought with us.

I think Stephen felt protective towards us both. Just as I have always felt I had to do certain things because Joel could no longer do them, I think looking after Ben and I fulfilled a similar need for Stephen.

We helped him paint his new flat – we had no idea what we were doing – we just followed him around trying to help. Poor Stephen – he couldn’t have had two less practical decorators. We fucked up the skirting board, we ruined the floor, and we couldn’t paint in straight lines to save our lives. But we all loved being there together – it was so much safer not to be alone. I think we all felt that; the music playing the whole time, the ladders, the smell of paint; the sense that we were doing something – anything.

Stephen was so lovely. He was fragile looking, very thin and full of nervous energy. He wasn’t as funny as Joel and we never had that same closeness, but that year we needed each other. Financially, he lived on a knife-edge. He was a freelance photographer and they are always the last ones to get paid. He was also rubbish at hassling people for his money - he was too gentle. I remember a card on his wall that said “You want it when??”, and next to that, there was a cartoon of a laughing man. It was from a newspaper he did a lot of work for.

Despite being constantly broke though, he kept open house for us. We were always welcome – to stay, to share his food – whatever he had was ours. I felt safe there. It stopped me from thinking too much. Stephen was the kind of person who always wanted to please his friends. If he thought it would make you happy he would lie outrageously – some completely over the top compliment that you absolutely knew for sure wasn’t true – but it was nice all the same, because it came from a good place.

The next I heard of Ben, it must have been 1988 or 1989. I was at the cottage in Suffolk with Marnie and David. When my first son was born, naturally, the second name I gave him was Joel’s and I had brought him there, along with his father. I remember sitting at a table outside in the garden. T was there too, back from the States with his American girlfriend.

I felt uncomfortable. I don’t know if it was the same for T, but he didn’t look very happy. He had his “everything is cool” expression on his face but you could see behind that quite easily. His girlfriend, wife – I can’t remember if they were married by then – she didn’t say much; I didn’t think she liked me. It felt weird being there with our partners. Poor Marnie – it must have been so awkward for her, keeping the conversation going. No one else was trying very hard.

She said Ben was really happy in America. He’d settled in Philadelphia and married an artist. She showed me a photo of her – she was beautiful – a pale face surrounded by red hair. He also had a son, younger than mine, also named after Joel. She said he’d started a design company and was really successful. I was so pleased. He’d had such a rocky start – I was so glad he was ok.

It was a different story the next time I saw Marnie. This time I had two boys, and I came alone. I was still living with their father but it was already over. T wasn’t there.

Instead, there was a man I’d known on the island. Dark as a pirate, Will had a golden ticket when he was younger – he was a brilliant, talented artist. It had been his girlfriend who’d sung at Joel’s memorial service. He couldn’t have been that old, but he hadn’t aged well. His face was puffy; his eyes had kind of disappeared into all the extra flesh.

His two children were also staying. The atmosphere was tense. I think their mother had only allowed them to visit because Marnie was there. The eldest must have been thirteen or so. She looked anxious. The little boy was wild. Marnie was very gentle with them. She said it had been the girl who’d found her father when he’d tried to commit suicide

Will’s mother was there too. She and Marnie made such a pair – two stunningly beautiful old ladies, still tall, still blonde, still clicking away with their cameras.

Will was in a relationship with Joel’s girlfriend at the time, and she was there with her daughter too. We avoided each other. Another awkward situation for Marnie – God I put her on the spot so many times.

I had last seen her on the island the year after Joel’s death. Her boyfriend had just dumped her for me. It hadn’t been intentional – I never set out to do it, but even at the time I was aware that it wasn’t the nicest thing I have ever done. I am not very good at self-restraint. He turned out to be a complete wanker anyway. A vain bully who never let a conversation go by without mentioning his number one. After us, I think he concentrated on page three girls exclusively.

David had died a few years before. I wondered how Marnie managed to carry on. I was still young enough then, not to understand that you just do, mostly; whatever life throws at you. She carried on with such grace. She still does.

I almost met Ben again that afternoon. I was so looking forward to it. There was a constant stream of phone calls. He wasn’t far – he was coming but he’d be late – he had to stop somewhere first – the car had broken down.

Marnie took each call with a smile. She told me how Ben’s business had failed and how he’d fallen back into his old habits again. He’d split up with his wife and somehow ended up in a psychiatric hospital, and after a while, once the insurance had run out, or the divorce had come through or something, the authorities had just put him on a plane back to England, like a piece of misaddressed mail.

She said he was pretty fucked up when he arrived. I think he’d been on strong medication and they hadn’t given him any to bring with him. Somehow, he’d been taken to a hospital and had recently been discharged. He wasn’t the same, but he was as well as he would ever be.

He never did arrive, at least, not before I left. Soon after, we had a long, long conversation on the phone. I remember spending hours, lying on my bed, laughing softly, listening to him. He didn’t make a lot of sense. He had that way of speaking that junkies often have – even when they’re not on drugs. Vague, breaking off in mid-sentence, switching from one thing to another, saying wildly improbable things you just know can’t be true.

You could hear some of the lovely old Ben through the chaos, but he was only half-there. He had met someone in the hospital and they were going to be together for the rest of their lives. He was going to have a massive tattoo to prove it, just as soon as he could get the money together. We promised to meet up soon – we didn’t live so far away from each other. And then I heard nothing.

Perhaps four or five months later I was queuing in a supermarket, reading the local newspaper as it travelled along the conveyor belt, waiting for my turn. I think I was about five lines in before I realised I was reading Ben’s inquest verdict. It happens all the time like that for ex-addicts – they stay clean, and then just once, that’s all it takes – they fall back into it again, only they don’t realise that their normal dose is now way too much. And they die.

Discuss this piece in the abctales forum


Comments

chuck | June 15, 2009 - 16:47

I prefer when you relate your life to broader changes in the 70's and 80's. But that's just me. Maybe this piece is a bit too personal to be of general interest? But you write well and ABCtales is very eclectic so I'm sure some readers will love it.

insertponceyfre... | June 15, 2009 - 16:56

thanks for reading it chuck = I am glad you liked the bits you liked. I think alot of it is too personal to be of general interest but that wasn't the point of writing it in the first place (that isn't meant to sound like I am in a huff or anything) - I really appreciate your comments. c

chuck | June 15, 2009 - 17:35

I understand. This is a great place to write whatever comes to mind. It gets more complicated if you have broader aspirations (I may have used that phrase already).

insertponceyfre... | June 15, 2009 - 18:16

random!

Margharita | June 15, 2009 - 20:21

It is obviously very personal and, as you say, you had your own purpose with it. I think the first part - up till the end of the bit in Stephen's flat -works really well for any reader; it's vivid and the characters come through really strongly. After that I got a bit confused with who had been doing what to whom, but then Ben comes right back into the story and it's really back in focus. I thought you brilliantly captured the way addicts drop in and out of sight, and the way you can find out the end of the story, even for someone you've been close to, by accident.

celticman | June 15, 2009 - 23:58

I like it. I think it starts off well, but goes on a a few tangents, relies overmuch on the reader knowing who is who, like a Russian novel, but hey, that's no bad thing.

insertponceyfre... | June 16, 2009 - 05:25

it was the tangents that worried me too, and I see that people have to know who is who, but I couldn't see how to get around that. thanks celticman. c

Ewan | June 16, 2009 - 06:59

Well, this is where you make your choice, Inseretc.

Either you think about employing some fictional techniques (often employed with some licence in life-writing) or you just keep writing it the way it was, because you must.

Even so, I don't think you need to worry too much until you have it all down. What I'm thinking about is a re-draft at a much later time; people can appear briefly before they need to, other people can refer to them before they appear. It doesn't have to be true, exactly.

Did you read 'Peeling the Onion' by Gunter Grass? No doubt it's in the autobiography section of libraries and bookshops. It shouldn't be, it's life writing. Grass talks about his supposed earlier autobiographical material, about what (and who) in his novels is autobiographical and then tops it all off by revealing that he was, after all, in the Hitler Youth organisation, despite having denied this in print 40 years earlier.

What I'm saying is, you have great source material for a novel here, in my opinion. My question is, do you want to use it to write one?

Keep posting
Ewan

insertponceyfre... | June 16, 2009 - 12:04

hello Margharita - thank you so much for wading through it and taking the time to add such helpful criticism. I can see why it is confusing, with all the different people dropping in and out and I'm really flattered that you like the parts about ben.

insertponceyfre... | June 16, 2009 - 12:58

god I wish I could change my username. Thank you Ewan, for the help - it's given me a lot to think about.

What's the difference between life writing and autobiography?

I haven't read that book (brilliant title btw). I am trying to read something else right now - I promised I would, but I'll read that next

I think I'll carry on trying to keep it as true as I can for the time being. so far, apart from different names, I only had to make one composite character (from three real ones) - and that was because it really mattered to someone else.

there is still quite a lot more I want to do in this way, but after that maybe I would quite like to have a go and see if I can make it into a novel - still not entirely sure how to do that but I'll think about it later

I am really grateful for the advice etc
c

celticman | June 16, 2009 - 16:38

For life writing you need to have a life? Autobiography is done by robots? I'll need to get a life.

insertponceyfre... | June 16, 2009 - 16:44

me too - maybe there is somewhere on the internet? you would have to make sure they did free returns though, in case you didn't like the life you got. if I find one I will send you a link

Ewan | June 16, 2009 - 18:38

Life writing, as far as I understand it, is (auto)biographical in as much as it draws on (the author's) someones's life to a much greater extent than 'write what you know'.

Some people might say that Capote's 'In Cold Blood' qualifies, although it's a heavily fictionalised account of events (involving other people, not him), no matter what he says. Lots of people's first novel is a version of an autobiography disguised, percolated or distilled. If you do read the Grass book, I think it will become self-evident.

Thanks for a grin, Celticman.

Ewan

insertponceyfre... | June 17, 2009 - 12:14

thanks ewan, I've been looking it up -I had never heard the expression before. will read book. c