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The Sense of an Ending

The Sense of an Ending

Titel: The Sense of an Ending Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Julian Barnes
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Brother Jack at Cambridge?’
    ‘I haven’t met him, no, and don’t expect to. He’s in his final year. But I’ve heard of him, read about him in a magazine article. And about the people he goes around with, yes.’
    He clearly wanted to leave it at that, but I wouldn’t let him.
    ‘And so what do you think of him?’
    Adrian paused. He took a sip of beer, and then said with sudden vehemence, ‘I
hate
the way the English have of not being serious about being serious. I
really hate
it.’
    In another mood, I might have taken this as a strike against the three of us. Instead, I felt a throb of vindication.
    Veronica and I continued going out together, all through our second year. One evening, perhaps a little drunk, she let me put my hand down her knickers. I felt extravagant pride as I scuffled around. She wouldn’t let me put my finger inside her, but wordlessly, over the next days, we developed a way to pleasure. We would be on the floor, kissing. I would take off my watch, roll up my left sleeve, put my hand into her knickers and gradually shuffle them down her thighs a little; then I would place my hand flat on the floor, and she would rub herself against my trapped wrist until she came. For a few weeks this made me feel masterful, but back in my room my wanking was sometimes edged with resentment. And what kind of a trade-off had I got myself into now? A better, or a worse one? I discovered something else I couldn’t understand: I was, presumably, meant to feel closer to her, but didn’t.
    ‘So, do you ever think about where our relationship is heading?’
    She said it just like that, out of the blue. She had come round for tea, bringing slices of fruitcake.
    ‘Do you?’
    ‘I asked first.’
    I thought – and it may not have been a gallant reaction – is this why you started letting me put my hand down your pants?
    ‘Does it have to head somewhere?’
    ‘Isn’t that what relationships do?’
    ‘I don’t know. I haven’t been in enough of them.’
    ‘Look, Tony,’ she said. ‘I don’t stagnate.’
    I thought about this for a while, or tried to. But instead kept seeing an image of stagnant water, with thick scum and hovering mosquitoes. I realised I wasn’t much good at discussing this sort of stuff.
    ‘So you think we’re stagnating?’
    She did that eyebrow-above-the-spectacle-frame tic that I no longer found quite so cute. I went on,
    ‘Isn’t there something between stagnation and heading somewhere?’
    ‘Like?’
    ‘Like having a nice time. Enjoy the day and all that?’ But just saying this made me wonder if I
was
enjoying the day any longer. I also thought: What does she want me to say?
    ‘And do you think we’re suited?’
    ‘You keep asking me questions as if you know the answer to them. Or as if you know the answer you want. So why don’t you tell me what it is and I’ll tell you whether it’s mine as well?’
    ‘You’re quite cowardly, aren’t you, Tony?’
    ‘I think it’s more that I’m … peaceable.’
    ‘Well, I wouldn’t want to disturb your self-image.’
    We finished our tea. I wrapped up the two remaining slices of cake and put them in a tin. Veronica kissed me nearer the corner of my lips than the centre, and then left. In my mind, this was the beginning of the end of our relationship. Or have I just remembered it this way to make it seem so, and to apportion blame? If asked in a court of law what happened and what was said, I could only attest to the words ‘heading’, ‘stagnating’ and ‘peaceable’. I’d never thought of myself as peaceable – or its opposite – until then. I would also swear to the truth of the biscuit tin; it was burgundy red, with the Queen’s smiling profile on it.
    I don’t want to give the impression that all I did at Bristol was work and see Veronica. But few other memories come back to me. One that does – one single, distinct event – was the night I witnessed the Severn Bore. The local paper used to print a timetable, indicating where best to catch it and when. But the first occasion I tried, the water didn’t seem to be obeying its instructions. Then, one evening at Minsterworth, a group of us waited on the river bank until after midnight and were eventually rewarded. For an hour or two we observed the river flowing gently down to the sea as all good rivers do. The moon’s intermittent lighting was assisted by the occasional explorations of a few powerful torches. Then there was a whisper, and a

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