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      her wide hips – every time she paused for breath her supportive

      father heard the grating after-tone … send in the clooownssshhrrghhh.

      The intervention had been, perhaps, her finest ever performance:

      standing there, for once with an audience at least close to double

      figures, and proving how much more mature she could be than

      her spaced-out mother and senile father. Poor Lottie! The least

      objection – the slightest check to one of her outbursts – was, Zack

      knew only too well, the way to really enrage her … such a temper –

      such anger. Yet on this occasion … I threw caution to the winds. Why?

      There was the reopened wound of his split from Athena … it’s the

      last, not the bloody first, that’s the deepest, and so he’d shouted her

      down: That’s enough! You’ve no right to browbeat me in this way –

      not you, Lottie, or any of you other ungrateful whelps … or words

      to that effect. Oscar, who has his mother’s neat, dark features … and

      permanently shaded top lip, had looked up from his phone-fiddling

      and guffawed: You’re seventy-eight years old, Zack Busner – you’re

      seventy-eight years old! Who was he, this pseudo-intellectual,

      pseudo-biker in all his pretentiousness, to berate the father who …

      wiped his fucking bum! It’d been Daniel, one of life’s conciliators,

      who’d eventually calmed them all down. Busner felt a great affinity

      with his second son, who … like me, has always had a … mutating

      mental thunderhead between him and the sunlight: a profoundly

      disturbed elder brother. It’d made of him a coper as well as a conciliator

      – a coper and a tosher and a mender and a marrier of one

      two-by-four to the next. Daniel had been the first of Zack’s children

      to move back into the Redington Road house with the stated intention

      of … keeping a bit of an eye on Dad – the Fortess Road flat had

      gone the way of all rental properties, and, although he’d been saying

      for a while that when the lease ended he’d … take to the open road,

      winter was coming – so he’d scuttled back up to Hampstead … my

      shitty-little tail between my bemerded legs. Zack couldn’t help feeling

      a little cynical about Daniel and Pat’s eye-keeping: the doctoring

      wasn’t … that lucrative, while his partner, the earthy and mostly

      indolent Patricia … hadn’t stopped pushing ’em out until she was

      nigh-on perimenopausal. They’d had a house of their own, once …

      Palmers Green, wasn’t it? But, as the years passed, so the shortfall

      between their earnings and the mortgage payments grew. Unlike

      the thrifty Oscar, who’d scrimped and saved and bought-to-let,

      they’d been compelled to sell-to-borrow … moving further and

      further out, sending their vast brood of kids to wilder and wilder

      schools, until they were marooned out in the Essex flatlands. There

      were rooms aplenty at Redington Road for these whelps’ whelps –

      of whom there were so many their grandfather couldn’t remember

      their names … if I even knew them to begin with. He’d encounter

      one or other of them on the stairs, or emerging from a bathroom,

      and reel back, shocked by this particular expression … of my

      own phenotype: faces of a greater or less … frogginess, but all with

      standard, Busner-issue receding chins, wide mouths and prominent

      yet flat-bridged noses – all of them with mild blue eyes, mostly

      goggling behind thick lenses. And their grandfather would gaze

      at them dumbstruck, thinking … Who are they, my descendants?

      Who indeed. – Nonetheless, on the afternoon of the Big Interventio,

      it was Daniel who’d … mended fences, just as he’d mended

      the guttering, put the wildly overgrown garden in order and installed

      the inset ceiling spotlights … possibly with a view to this

      interrogation. Dad, he’d said, we’re quite simply worried about you

      … or words to that effect, and we wonder whether you might be

      more, um, comfortable somewhere where people can keep an eye

      on you consistently … It was sort of okay when it was just Pat,

      me and the kids here – but now so many of the others have pitched

      up as well … and I’ve taken this Southwark job … Well … we

      rather sort of … feel … you’re getting sort of … lost between

      the … cracks. Surely … some sort of … assisted … living … ?

      He had tailed off as his courage sort of deserted him – it was left to

      his half-sister to do the … soothsaying: You’re getting forgetful,

      Dad – you don’t take your medication … You have, um … these

      accidents – what if you fall? And left it to her younger sister in

      turn to deliver the … coup de grâce: It’s Simon, really, Dad, he’s a

      complete fucking loony and none of us can stand him … There’d

      been, Busner thinks now, still standing before the groovy wooden

      door, waiting for admission to this … chamber of secrets – what’re

      they gonna do to me? What possible sanction can there be for putting

      your meat-and-two-veg’ on a buffet counter? a spring-loaded catch

      in the collective throat of the family … and Frankie released It …

      Clever Frankie – direct Frankie. Smart and efficient Frankie –

      fully-medically-qualified Frankie, who works as a locum only because

      she wants her time free to pursue … other projects. Smart,

      neat, almost … reet-petite Frankie, who’s got all her sister’s share

      of their mother’s ethereal good looks, yet … makes very little

      of them … The expressions on the other Busneresque faces had

      shifted – they all became animated, sat up, stopped mucking

      about with their mobile phones, and so had begun … a clamour

      of complaint: Simon had burned the carpet and the sheets in the

      attic bedroom, he’d blocked the downstairs toilet with excessive

      amounts of toilet paper, he’d woken the entire house at three in the

      morning playing Carmina Burana … vita de-tes-ta-bi-lis … nunc

      obdurat … et tunc curat … ludo men-tis ac-i-em … Sors sa-lu-tis!! Et

      vir-tu-tis!! Michi nunc con-traaaria!! Est affectusss! Et de-fectussss!

      Semper in an-garia … !! Because he’d been enslaved by the same

      bloody thing that forever enslaves all of us: having gone out to some

      dreadful-bloody-dive in Kilburn, where he succeeded in picking

      up someone at least biologically female – as Pat-the-Prude put it.

      Someone who – it transpired the following morning when she

      refused to leave the house – was even crazier than Simon! Zack

      gagged trying to drink in all this poisonous resentment – he’d

      spluttered, I-I d-don’t rightly know where to begin when it comes

      to rebutting this dreadful calumny … Whereupon his third son …

      dangerous to know piped up again: You are seventy-eight years

      old! You are seventy-eight years old! His leathery, bearded face

      creasing, his hands shining his leathery knees, You are seventy-eight

      years old! You are seventy-eight years old! Basking in Oscar’s

      fury, his father had considered … yet again the stereotypic character

      of younger siblings’ resentments: He thinks Simon crazy …

      therefore Simon is Mark, so he’s pl
    unged into insecurity … And

      it might’ve been at that precise point … or possibly sometime later,

      that the malefactor had himself appeared, slinking into the big

      Busner-filled room and squatting down beside the mirrored cocktail

      cabinet – another relic of the Maurice Years … You’ll have a cocktail,

      won’t you, Zachary-dear? Gin-and-it? Kill a few brain cells while we

      tune in to the Brains Trust? This – this! Then – now! This much he

      knew – I know: he has reached the final Ashrama, the life-stage of

      renunciation, so then – as now – he’d sat tight-lipped behind his

      mask of akrodha … the state attainable by sustained practice wherein

      the Sannyasin maintains his equanimity despite being roundly abused

      by his own sickeningly ungrateful grown-up children, venturing only

      this feeble riposte: He’s more sinned against than sinning … Right

      away Oscar was up on his hind-legs … like his wet-nosed namesake

      … long dead – Miriam took him to the vet, should’ve liked to say

      goodbye … and the venom had spurted out: You may be seventy-eight

      years old – you may even be a bit confused – but that doesn’t

      disqualify you from hearing hard truths … hard stuff – yeah. Yeah!

      All of our childhoods, yeah – all of ’em buggered up by you with

      this bullshit: your great healing empathy – your magical healing

      touch, which you insisted on bestowing on all-and-fucking-sundry

      all the fucking time! All-and-fucking-sundry! To’ve conceived a

      child at all was miraculous – to’ve watched him weaned and grown

      to manhood a series of amazing revelations … thousands each day –

      if you troubled to look, yet there he’d been, a Pecksniff pointing the

      way towards responsibilities … he’ll never ever experience – all-and-fucking-sundry,

      indeed! Zack had remained implanted in the shoddy

      upholstery beside Pat-the-Prude – and last night, in Room Five-Twenty,

      he’d stared balefully down at his parenthetic toes … they

      say toenails grow when you’re dead – therefore I must be … And right

      now, still standing in front of the groovy wooden door in the

      Hilton’s lobby, his son’s execrations return … to soil me again.

      Y’know, to be honest, Dad – because honesty is what you value

      above all else, isn’t it … Well, to be fucking honest, Dad, I think

      I’d’ve been better off without a father at all, instead of one who

      picks saddo charity cases up off the streets and drags them into

      the bosom of his own bloody family ’cause he’s got some fucking

      messiah-complex! Such hateful words … he took his mother to the

      hospice – I should’ve liked to say goodbye … poor Miriam! Her

      beautiful, youthful curves planed flat by age … her lovely smooth

      skin foxed by liver spots and melanomas … then varnished by the

      chemo’ … Her limbs stiffened by rigor mortis – then assembled

      into a coffin so she could be burned in the blown-out shell of her

      younger self … How horrible! Best not touch her … might be

      nailed to her – thrust atop the same flaming grill … And Simon?

      Poor, benighted, homeless and helpless Simon – Simon whose

      mind is a bloody battlefield all day, every day, what did he do?

      He laughed! He roared with laughter! He rocked and rolled with

      merriment so much the cocktail cabinet he was leaning against

      rocked and rolled as well – Lottie had simply roared: He swore at

      me! Told me to fuck right off out of it in my own bloody home!

      While her sensible sister quietly added: He can be a lot more

      abusive than that if you get in his way – there’re ample grounds for

      a section … And Simon had roared some more, his spotty-and-stubbly

      Adam’s apple bouncy-bouncy as he … volleyed their selfishness

      back in their faces: Fair enough … fair enough – you’re Fair-enough-Frankie,

      innit … bin it … S’me – s’him … Sick as a pig-in-shit,

      me – true enough, but where’s all your money and your edyucashun

      and your sickotherapy got you lot? What I see – what I see’s

      Guardian-reading fucking ingrates squatting in the strictly-I’m-a-celebrity-Big-Busner-house

      … That’s what I see – and the lot of

      you got the squabbly-wobblies over money-can’t-buy-you – that’s

      what I hear … Zack, attuned as ever to the ultrasonic whine

      of psychosis, heard the extreme neediness lurking behind Simon’s

      words – heard it, and registered also the impossibility of anyone …

      or ones’ ever being able to fulfil it and make good the neglect of

      parents, teachers, officers and, of course, psychiatrists. It’s this

      incommensurability – between his own capacity to care for Simon

      … for Henry, Mark and all the others as well, and the caring such

      distress so plainly demands – that Busner experiences as … love –

      I confess it: I love Simon, just as I loved Henry, love Mark … all the

      others as well … At any event, he’d always been more partial to

      psychotics than these … neotenous neurotics, and, while conceding

      his behaviour could be pretty … primal at times – I’m an ape-man,

      I’m an ape-ape-man, theirs was simply … brutish. He’d encountered

      the woman Simon had picked up one morning at the breakfast

      table – Zack had been huffing and puffing into his porridge, while

      Simon, proud of his conquest, introduced them thus: Ann, this

      is Doctor Zebadius Obadius Anthraxobadus. He is a great healer,

      scientist and alchemical worker – he can see the future … all of

      our futures … This is his castle on the hill, dearie, and we’re his

      guests … Ann, who looked to be in her early thirties, had an

      electro-shock of ginger hair on her narrow head, peeling lips …

      rubber cement and the warily defiant, yet terrified eyes of the

      psychotic. All she’d said was, And? Which Zack accepted as … the

      mot juste – not only in that context, but in all others as well. For

      did not And? perfectly convey that nothing … nichts, nada, rien du

      tout is discrete – everything is conjoined: one moment to the next,

      space to time, cause to effect … at least in our own minds. And

      so Simon had … carried on conjoining: explaining to Ann how

      Doctor Zebadius Obadius Anthraxobadus had met him when he

      was lying on a flattened cardboard box next to the steps descending

      into Tottenham Court Road tube station – lying there pinioned by

      the eyes of Freddie Mercury’s giant effigy, which stared down from

      on top of the Dominion’s portico. I want to break free, Simon had

      croaked – but there was scant chance of that: Zack, hurrying to

      Foyle’s, in search of a book on Ch’an, had heard this – and at the

      same time been struck by the beggar’s Buddhistic posture: cross-legged

      in a child’s flower-patterned sleeping bag, his black hair

      hacked into a disturbing divot, his face a bashed-about conker:

      wind-browned and gaunt, his mien innocently guilty. In his mitty

      hands he’d been holding a flap torn off a cardboard box on which

      he’d lettered: EX-ARMY SOLDIER ON THE RD WAS 25138694

      i HAVE PTSD CAN YOU HELP ME TO FIND A BED FOOD SHELTER

      THANK YOU’S so MU
    CH COMPLEX SIMON. It’d been the complex

      that really hooked Zack – and, after giving him a pound, he’d

      asked the ex-squaddie if he’d mind being photographed. It’d been

      the very first snap he’d bagged with the smartphone given him by

      his grandson, and in the weeks which followed, whenever Simon

      grew distressed … They’re taking me into the dark chamber – don’t let

      ’em PUT THAT THING ON ME! Zack faffed about until this

      pitiful vision was once more before them, and he’d say, Look at

      this and tell me things haven’t got better … He’d installed Simon

      at Redington Road – while he went to Camilla’s in Kilburn to sleep

      – saying to Daniel and the others when they bridled: C’mon, don’t

      be a sickening bunch of Missus Jellybys – this man is as worthy

      of your compassion – all of your compassion – as anyone else …

      Don’t bother with covenanting Oxfam, or filling out a tax-payer

      declaration for Amnesty – that’s not charity, it’s accessorising

      your own bleeding hearts … Go to any high street in any of our

      marvellous towns and cities and you can find men and women

      simply lying on the ground suffering – all of them are as deserving

      of this house as you lot – as deserving of your cars, your clothes,

      your Sardinian cultural tours and your mobile-bloody-phones as

      well – you all know this. You MUST know this – I’ve been teaching

      it to you your entire-bloody-lives. At least, that’s what I remember,

      not the catalogue of crimes you accuse me of … Toenails grow when

      you’re dead – therefore I must be … rolling home — Last night, in

      Room Five-Twenty, Zack had arisen from the bed and stared into

      the sallow and labial petals of the sub-Georgia O’Keeffe daub

      planted in the alcove behind. What was it Ann had added to

      Simon’s description of their beneficent host? Ah, yes – she’d said

      that besides being a wise and charitable man Doctor Anthraxobadus

      was the Great White Spirit who lived in the fifth dimension –

      an unreal estate, from which he nonetheless managed to control

      everything that happened in the world … with wires – WIRES! So

      charmingly recherché, this, in an era when psychotics – modish, as

      they always are – were incorporating the new digital technologies

     

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