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Binstead鈥檚 Safari

 

Stan Binstead and his wife, Millie, reached London early in the morning. They both felt heavy and tired from their flight and were already weighed down by an emotion that made for even greater lassitude 鈥 a kind of inertia, intermittently broken by irritable indecisiveness. In the army they call it combat fatigue.

He hadn鈥檛 wanted to bring her along; she kept pleading until he gave in. No sentimental argument would have persuaded him, but she wasn鈥檛 in the habit of thinking up such maneuvers. She would never ask, 鈥淗ow could you leave me?鈥 or tell him, 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 love me.鈥 She had just said, 鈥淏ut I鈥檝e never seen London. I鈥檝e never been to Africa. It鈥檚 the only chance I鈥檒l ever have to go on a really nice vacation. I鈥檝e never been out of the country at all.鈥 It was true. She hadn鈥檛 even been away from New England before the first time he鈥檇 taken her to visit his family.

鈥淭he money it would cost,鈥 he had said, as if otherwise, naturally, it would be all right. He needed to go, for research. That was what he said. Her presence would be a luxury.

Then, right on time, as though planned that way, her Great Aunt Edna died, leaving her a nice little sum of money and several glass cases filled with knick-knacks that would have聽been useless all the time they were going into the collection, yet were now in fashion and could be sold for quite a lot. Millie had been fond of the old lady and was overjoyed about the bequest. How nice of her it had been, she kept saying. How thoughtful.

They dozed for part of the morning in the twin beds of their hotel room, had lunch downstairs and made plans for their stay. Stan hadn鈥檛 been able to get hold of his friend, Jack, who 鈥 according to the girl who answered the phone when he called up 鈥 was still away on a long weekend in the country. It was some kind of holiday in town; all the stores were closed. Millie wanted to take one of the tourist bus rides with him. He told her no, she should go herself and he would stay in the room and read the papers.

鈥淥h, Stan,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou come three thousand miles just to read the newspapers? You can buy the same ones at home.鈥

鈥淲ell, I don鈥檛 want to go on one of those tours.鈥

鈥淥kay, we鈥檒l walk.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 raining.鈥

Millie鈥檚 face took on a peculiar look, as though parts of it聽had shrunk. 鈥淲e鈥檒l walk in the rain,鈥 she said.

That was what they ended up doing. They went through a few parks, saw some fine crescents and cornices and squares, and Millie asked him at least three times if he wasn鈥檛 glad she鈥檇 remembered to pack the umbrellas. As they walked forward through the drizzle, he thought: It鈥檚 all right sometimes, then suddenly it鈥檚 like this. I was foolish. I should just have left. I should have said: Take a vacation wherever you want to, as long as it鈥檚 a long way away from me.

They got lost, found an Italian restaurant that was open, and had supper. They drank twice as much as usual, becoming聽mildly drunk, and were out on the wet streets again, feeling befuddled but more enthusiastic about London than they had been before.

Stan said, 鈥淭his is a great town.鈥

鈥淢y feet are turning all funny,鈥 Millie told him, in a high little voice like a child at a birthday party.

鈥淐ome on, funnyfoot,鈥 he said close to her ear.

He put his arm around her. She had an idea that at last things were going to be all right. Back at the hotel, they made love for the first time in many months. But, in the morning, nothing had changed. They had breakfast, he spent half an hour telephoning, and was finally able to find his friend, Jack.

鈥淲ill you be all right shopping, and so on?鈥 he asked her. 鈥淐an鈥檛 I meet Jack?鈥

鈥淚 think it would be sort of boring for you.鈥

鈥淏ut I鈥檇 like to come.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檙e just going to be talking shop the whole time. And聽catching up on all the years we haven鈥檛 seen each other.鈥

She smiled, and thought: So, it鈥檚 you who would be bored if I came along.

鈥淭he whole day?鈥

鈥淲ell, look. There are all those tours you wanted to go on, and the museums, and if you could try to get some of the tickets, that would be a help. Unless 鈥 no, I won鈥檛 know till I talk to Jack. I want to see some of the footage from that documentary he worked on. They may set it up for the evening. You go enjoy yourself, see the town. I鈥檒l do the American Express and the Africa part.鈥

鈥淵ou don鈥檛 want to do anything together?鈥

鈥淚鈥檝e got these meetings. I told you. And I鈥檝e got to do聽some research in the libraries. Listen,鈥 he said, nervousness聽coming into his face and voice, 鈥淚 told you before we got here, long before: I鈥檓 supposed to be working. You wanted to come along 鈥 fine, but I can鈥檛 hold your hand.鈥

鈥淚 only asked.鈥

He went to a meeting and had lunch with some of his colleagues.

*

The trip would never become a second honeymoon, as she had begun to hope the night before. No chance of that. It would be another eight or ten months before he decided he wanted her again.

She went to a museum. She liked museums, but it always took as much time to read the information as to look at the things.

This bowl is decorated by a process known as cloisonn茅. This figure represents the goddess Hathor. The dwarf in the corner is probably the royal sandalbearer.

There were crowds everywhere. She got on a bus to go back, but it went in the wrong direction. After doing the same kind of thing several times, she walked or took taxis from the Underground stations. The Underground was the one part of the city she understood immediately. It was exactly the way it promised to be. When the chart said west, that was what it meant, straight as an arrow. The plans on the walls coincided with real maps of the city and the electric lines were just as they ought to be: left, right, up, down. And each one was in a different color.

She went to all the big museums, one after another, visited a couple of the parks farther out of town, walked through the botanical gardens and went to a matin茅e. She bought two pairs of shoes, and began to enjoy herself.

Stan was off meeting people with his friend. And who knew who else. That first evening he鈥檇 gone out alone, he had come back drunk. And the next, he鈥檇 tottered in so late that when she turned on the light, he said he was too tired to talk and if she made a fuss or even said a word, he鈥檇 never speak to her again. On the next day, the rain stopped for an entire twenty-four-hour stretch and she had tea alone in an upstairs tea-room filled with little chairs and tables that seemed made for children. She saw exactly the right present for her mother-in-law, attended an afternoon piano concert, was caught in the rain afterwards, couldn鈥檛 find her way back for an hour, and got her period.

They went to the theater together once. She asked why this friend, Jack, couldn鈥檛 join them. Conferences, Stan said.

*

She was going from shop to shop one day, looking for a nice purse to send her sister, Betty. The sun was out, she waited at the curb for the traffic lights to change, and then when they did, caught sight of herself in the plate glass of a store opposite. She saw an ordinary woman, mooning along the street, who looked like somebody else. She thought: My God, I look like somebody鈥檚 mother. The thought paralyzed her for an instant. She let the lights change a second time before she moved with the crowd. She crossed the street towards her reflection, stopped outside the building and pretended that she was waiting for someone. She wanted to be still and think for a while, but there was no place to sit down.

If I don鈥檛 do something, she thought, nobody else will. I鈥檝e got to do something. It鈥檚 already too late anyway, so why not? Could anything be worse than the way things are?

She went and had her hair cut, bought some clothes and earrings, makeup, bead necklaces, a bracelet and some nail polish which she never used but suddenly thought she might try. She decided to go out alone in the evening. Stan would be back late that night too. He had warned her that every night was going to be like this.

She stood outside the opera house and bought a ticket at the side entrance near the back, where people were selling because their favorite dancer had been replaced by someone else. She had thought it would be an opera, but it was a ballet: the girl in a pink costume, men giving her roses, the wicked witch putting a spell on her and the prince eventually finding her and waking her up. True love, rescue, marriage. Happily ever after.

At the end, when the girl next to her screamed, 鈥淏ravo,鈥 Millie yelled too. She was carried away. Everyone around her was shouting appreciation. She was no longer sure that she wanted to go on to Africa. She liked London. And afterwards, near midnight as she leaned towards her image in the hotel mirror, she thought she appeared completely different. She looked better.
Stan still hadn鈥檛 come in. She heard him much later and put her arm across her eyes until he banged into the wall and hit the switches that turned off the bedside lamp and lit up the one near the bathroom.

The first thing he said to her in the morning was, 鈥淲hat have you done to yourself?鈥

鈥淔or heaven鈥檚 sake,鈥 she told him. 鈥淚 had a haircut, that鈥檚 all.鈥 He looked astonished. She never answered back like that. But he hadn鈥檛 noticed the other changes in her.

 

 

Rachel Ingalls is an American-born author who has lived in the UK since 1965. She is the author of the novels聽Mrs. Caliban听补苍诲听Binstead鈥檚 Safari聽as well as numerous novellas and short stories.

This excerpt from聽Binstead’s Safari聽is published by permission of . Copyright 漏 1983 by Rachel聽Ingalls.
Published on February 5, 2019.

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