"Nothing is simpler than to lose oneself in Venice; and nothing is more fun than to be in this labyrinth without a Minotaur, as a Theseus without an Ariadne's thread."
Jean-Louis Vaudoyer
Venice is sinking, so they say. The same They that mutter darkly about climate change and super volcanoes, but are reticent on the whole subject of exactly what We should do about it (it being Our responsibility, not Theirs). It was something Dan thought about as he looked out of the hotel window, across the terracotta-tinted wedding cake rooftops that led down to San Marco, and the vaulted beauty of the Palazzo Ducale in the dusk.
There were the canals, of course. You couldn't escape them, because they changed the very light of the city – made it ethereal and set it apart from all other places. When night came, and the lanterns lit up in the gondolas (more halogen lamps now, not as romantic as the old-fashioned ones, but more safety conscious), it was as if the boundaries of space, time and culture, life and death, were crossed. The Grand Canal was full not of gondolas, but of paper boats carrying candles and flowers to long dead ancestors, and the people belonged anywhere and nowhere. Venice was itself, and another place, because water is always the gateway to distant worlds.
No, you couldn't escape the canals in Venice and, if you had a soul, you wouldn't want to.
When Dan had mentioned his holiday plans to friends at work, they'd all cooed over the canals. Everyone seemed to know someone who'd honeymooned in Venice, or at least had a dirty weekend. It was something demanded by the precepts of literature. Keith Waterhouse to Thomas Mann, everyone had something to say. Chiefly, it was 'Ah, Venice… '
No wonder the damn place had a Bridge of Sighs.
Even Alan – cold-blooded, cynical Alan, who claimed he'd sucked the nectar from life by his thirtieth birthday and was bored even then – even he had closed his eyes, exhaled a stream of passionate air through his nostrils and said, '
Magnifico
!'
Over a Prêt baguette and a cappuccino, he told Dan he was jealous.
'You'll adore it. All the artists do. It's like a big Wendy house of a city, covered in filigree and rubbed with gilding paint, just for all the creative types to play in.'
Dan had sniggered good-naturedly. He was more an illustrator than an artist, he commented, but Alan waved the fact away.
'Shut up, I'm rapturing. Anyway, who knows? You might even find a strapping olive-skinned gondolier to — ' Another vague, swishy hand wave. ' — punt your canoe.'
'I don't think so.'
Trepidation earned Dan one of Alan's speciality sneers. Years of English public school education, naturally plummy vowels and a secret ambition to be Quentin Crisp had honed them to a vicious perfection.
'Well, you can't spend the rest of your life moping, Dan. And holidays are supposed to be for dirty, nasty little flings. Why do think I go to Blackpool every year?'
It was something Dan didn't want to dwell on. Not here, and not now, looking out at the dying light over the Palazzo, shimmering in reds, oranges and purples. He watched the sunset until its conclusion, until the last stains left the sky to be overcome by the lights from buildings and, beyond the Square, boats. It was beautiful, if you accepted the smell.
You didn't see that in images, and Dan supposed that that was part of the joy. What he did – the inspiration he would draw from this place – it was all pages in glossy magazines, selling a dream of high living and romantic beauty to an eager public. His pictures, Alan's words… or those of his other colleagues.
Dan let the thick, beige curtain fall over the city, and turned back to the quiet, neutral space of his room. The Antigo Trovatore was a comfortable hotel, not too pricey, not too cheap, central and with good service. Taking advantage of all the deals of the season, Dan had been able to book two weeks. He looked at his single suitcase, sitting bleakly on the dressing table. It would have been nice if it wasn't a twin room, but he'd had to take what he could get.
Still, there were ensuite facilities and, after a hot shower in the clean, white bathroom, Dan reluctantly gave into jet lag and decided to hit the hay. It was barely nine thirty, local time, and after experimenting with various positions (left bed, right bed, pushed together, pulled apart), he settled in the bed nearest the window, wrapped in a towel and leafing through the movie guide.
It seemed a little odd to be alone in Venice, perhaps because he'd never been. Dan felt briefly that he was fighting convention, taking a stand against society in declaring his independence. He sure as hell wasn't going to wish that Paul was there.
Six months had passed, somehow, since they split up. It felt like nothing; the blink of an eye, probably fighting back tears. Not a happy time, but then the two years that preceded it hadn't been so great.
If Dan found himself thinking of when they first met, at a gallery show in Shepherd's Bush, drinking cheap champagne and being polite about the pictures; if he found himself thinking of the witty, attractive man who had shared his taste in art and then shared the taste of his kisses in the car park, he got angry. It wasn't, and had never been, enough.
He had never thought Paul was perfect. No, Mr. Average Height, Mousy Blond and Passable wasn't dramatic in his appeal. It was his way of putting you at ease that hit the target.
He remembered their first night together, after a couple of what could loosely be termed dates and a general pretence at romance. Paul's lips on his, breaths whispering between them, fingers stumbling over buttons and zippers… he was gentle, kind, passionate.
It took a few months for Dan to notice the undercurrent. At first, Paul started to take longer over penetration, insisted on topping more often.
'I just want to be in you,' he'd say, gazing seriously at Dan, dishevelled and magnetically naughty. 'You have such a great arse. No-one's ever pumped my cock like you.'
Sex would be harder, rougher. Words like 'whore' and 'cum-slut' would sneak in, leaking from Paul's mouth as he fucked, dribbling down to Dan's ear as he leaned over him, ramming his cock home.
At first, it was fairly subtle, and so it was new and exciting. By the end of their first year together, Dan was mistaking control for safety, and not going out so much. He agreed to indulge one of Paul's fantasies, and play with some handcuffs.
In the morning, when his wrists were scuffed and his backside torn, he knew it was time to do something about it. Paul, naturally, was mortified. He wept, so distressed that Dan hadn't been happy with things, and swore that they could work it out.
They went, as a couple, to a Christmas party in Lancaster Gate, kissed under the mistletoe, and left as the image of happy, stable lovers.
At home, Dan initiated sex for the first time in weeks, and ended up with a rutting bronco behind him, grinding his face into the pillows.
He left four days after Paul hit him. It was during an argument – he'd suggested that there were other ways to have fun than just lubing up and sticking it in, and been rewarded with a full facial.
'Ah! D'you like that, you fucker?'
Paul obviously wasn't expecting 'No.'
They fought, rather than just disagreed. Books and papers were flung off surfaces, the plastic phone and a bedside lamp were smashed, and then Paul swung a backhander, catching Dan on the cheekbone. A small gash opened up, half-dry spunk flew into the air, and somewhere amid the pain, humiliation and betrayal, Dan seemed to watch himself punch Paul on the nose.
As if he was viewing the scene from above, like a hospital operation, he watched the two naked bodies brawl, heard himself screaming obscenities, and then saw the fist come flying. He would, if he could, have shouted out and warned himself, because he was so busy letting out the months of frustration in a succession of four-letter words that it was unlikely he could duck to avoid it… but it was too late.
He arrived at work on Monday morning, a single man with a black eye and a puffy, purple cheek, but with a seed of self-respect germinating. He didn't press charges, in the long run. Didn't even report it, despite the exhortations of everyone who saw the damage. There didn't seem to be much point.
Besides, as Dan put the movie guide down, crawled under the covers and switched out the light, it was Paul's face that hovered behind his eyes, and Paul's body that he stretched out his arms for, twisting and frowning in his sleep.