I woke in the dark, not knowing where or who I was. Even the smell of Louise next to me was as yet unfamiliar enough contribute to my confusion. I was sufficiently aware of my exhaustion to know that I'd be asleep again within seconds, but awake enough not to be sure of any of the usual anchor-points of my own identity. What was my name? Where had I come from? What language was I even thinking in?
"Hardly surprising" my first psychotherapist said when I recounted this experience to him. "You'd just spent three months living in six different places, usually for very short periods. You'd been expelled from or chosen to leave four different families. You'd had brief, emotionally intense and fractured sexual relationships with seven women, one of whom subsequently killed herself. You'd left behind your old life without having any idea what you wanted to do about a new one. In other words, all the usual points of reference against which we construct an identity were missing."
"Yeah, I suppose so."
"Also, isn't there a passage early in Kerouac's 'On The Road' where something similar happens to his narrator? Your life could just have been imitating art."
"So you know what the Turin Shroud is?" Louise said between mouthfuls of fried egg and bacon.
We were breakfasting in the greasy spoon at the end of the road where her studio was vaguely situated. Non-English readers will probably not know that a 'greasy spoon' is a low-rent diner or café which specialises in cheap fried food, particularly traditional British breakfasts including eggs, bacon, pork sausage, blood sausage, tomatoes, mushrooms, and sliced bread all cooked in hot lard and served with a side dish of non-fried baked beans, so called because the perpetual oily atmosphere inside lends a viscous greasy patina to the house cutlery.
"It's a bale of old cloth that's supposed to have been the sheet they buried the crucified Christ in" I said, trying not to shovel yet another forkful of food into my mouth before I replied. I was very hungry. "Apparently it bears an imprint that the faithful think is Jesus's face and hands."
"Exactly. Superstitious nonsense, of course, all got up by some medieval forger for the lucrative trade in holy relics, but it's the principle that interests me. Hence my Camden Shroud."
I recalled her whipping off the multiply-defiled knickers she'd been wearing the previous night, impregnated with both Marielle's and her own piss and cunt juices and my own semen, hanging them on a coat stand in the studio "for the Shroud."
"Whereas the Turin gewgaw is only supposed to bear the magical traces of Our Lord and Saviour, thus underpinning by faith alone a thousand years of mystic patriarchal bollocks, the Camden Shroud actually will be the physical, visceral evidence of the existence of women in all our messy, odorous glory. What I'm going to do is stitch together the gusset panels of a thousand pairs of used knickers into a new, irrefutable relic of our female physicality. The religious will hate it, most men will hate it, a lot of women will hate it. It'll be called disgusting and tasteless, corrupting of youth and an undermining of some abstract, prettified notion of 'femininity.' Yet what could be more feminine than the diverse, messy, smelly physical traces of the one thing that makes us actually feminine -- our cunts?"
There wasn't any arguing with that. She sounded almost like a religious preacher herself.
"My friend Helen did something similar with used tampons while she was still at art school" Louise continued, mopping up a puddle of HP sauce with her fried bread. "That fucked with a lot of people's heads. Imagine -- women leak, bleed and smell! If that ever gets out civilisation's doomed."
"Sir Kenneth Clark would definitely not approve" I said.
"Oh, very good. D'you want some more coffee?"
We drank two more chipped enamel mugfuls, during which time Louise managed to smoke three cigarettes in succession. Even at 8.30 in the morning she was beautifully turned out, in imitation, I had discovered, of Otto Dix's 'Portrait of the Journalist Sylvia Von Harden.'
As we left the café I realised no money had changed hands for our breakfast.
"My credit's good round here" Louise said. "Which brings me to something I wanted to ask. How would you like to be immortalised in a work of art?"
"What, like a model?"
"You could say that. I think I can guarantee it'll be more fun than lying on a couch starkers for two hours, mind. I can't pay you any money, but as I said, my credit's good. You could do with a decent haircut for a start. And as for those clothes you're wearing..."
It was true about the hair. It had grown out with no more control than could be exercised as a rearguard action with my broken plastic comb. And I'd been wearing the same jeans and plaid shirt for so long I could no longer tell where I ended and they began.
"What would I have to do?"
It was still cold out, but the previous night's snow had melted appreciably. Stallholders were setting up their offers in Camden Lock Market. They all seemed to know Louise, waving and shouting greetings to her as we passed.
"Oh, just fuck me. I know you can do that well enough. This time I want you to do it under the camera lens. It'll only take twenty minutes of your time. In exchange you'll get a lifetime of artistic kudos, and I'll throw in an expert shearing and some new threads to replace those rags. What do you say?"
"You want me to make a porn movie with you?"
She stopped in her tracks, rounding on me as though outraged.
"Certainly not, darling. For a start, we will not be using a vulgar cine camera. For another, since when did any crappy porno limit itself to twenty minutes? This will be hailed in future as a mistresspiece of feminist art. A seminal work on your part, if you do it right. And I promise I'll disguise you in the final print so even your other girlfriends won't recognise you. How about it?"
As I gazed in astonishment I realised we were standing at the end of the alley where she'd pissed in the snow the previous night and asked me to remind her about it. I had no idea why. The white drift between the buildings was still in shadow and the yellow-rimmed cavity she'd made in its surface plainly visible. I reminded her about it.
"What? Oh, thank you, darling. Just an idea I wanted to run by my buddy Helen. Now, was that a yes to my indecent proposal?"
I guessed it was. She grabbed my arm and squeezed it, steering me toward a closed barber's shop on the other side of the road. There was an intercom buzzer by the locked door, which she pressed at great length.
"What the fuck do you want?" came a deep, camp male voice eventually from the speaker.
"Open up, Ozzy! I've got a fresh victim for you."