Chapter One: Iphigeneia at the Church of St Mary Magdalene
It might have been all of that poetry about demonic women and sado-masochistic desires, and the burning of incense and the profanation of altars, or maybe it was the atmosphere of fin de siècle ennui, but I decided to go to church that Sunday morning. I had been working all Saturday afternoon in the library and it was when I came out and saw the church that I decided to go the next morning. I am not especially religious, but religion interests me. I believe in something, though I'm not sure what it is, exactly. The church is opposite the library, and it is a beautiful Victorian gothic church. It is called the Church of St Mary Magdalene. I have always liked religious architecture.
So I went. It was a Sunday in mid October in 1999. The service lasted just over an hour. There were not many people there; twenty five at most I'd guess. I didn't get so bored that I actually counted them. It had a few good moments, but there were some very dull quarter hours. The sermon bored me and I felt patronized by it, and I thought that I was not the only one. There was a woman a couple of rows in front of me who was clearly displeased by it all. I could tell by her body language. She seemed to be unable to sit still.
The best part was taking communion. I decided on a whim to do it. By coincidence the fidgeting woman was in front of me in the line for the bread and wine. When it was her turn, she knelt before the vicar and he placed the bread (it was really a piece of rice paper) on her tongue, and handed her a tiny cup of wine. She must have forgotten to swallow the rice paper before she tried to drink the wine, because she coughed just as she sipped at it and wine sprayed out of her mouth and went all over the vicar's cassock. It was an awkward moment, but she did what she could to save it.
She got up quickly, and as she walked away she looked back sheepishly. We caught each other's eye. There was a trickle of wine running down her chin. As she turned again she took a handkerchief from her sleeve and wiped it away.
At one point a little later, she turned round and I happened to be looking at her when she did, so again our eyes briefly met. She looked interesting. Neither of us looked quickly away. It didn't seem awkward. I would have smiled, and I thought that she would have smiled too, had we not been in a church. But her eyes smiled, and they did something more too, though I could not say exactly what it was.
When the service was over, people began to gather in small groups in the central aisle, exchange muffled greetings and slowly walk towards the door. I didn't know anyone there of course, so I walked out alone. Outside on the street, I paused, wondering where to go next. Then I heard a voice behind me:
'You were as bored with that as I was.'
It was the fidgety, wine spraying woman.
'Some of it was quite good,' I said, and I thought it best not to mention the wine.
'That sermon;' she said, 'does that young man think we are seven years old? Once upon a time, sermons were intelligent. Does he think that I have never read the Bible? I wonder if he has.'
Her anger, which might really have been about the wine, and her forthrightness, which was certainly about her, made her more blustery than the October breeze that was blowing up.
She must have seen that I looked a bit perturbed, because she suddenly said
'Sorry. I'm a little abrupt at times, but you see there is never anyone here who looks interesting.'
I liked the idea that I looked interesting.
'May I introduce myself? My name is Iphigeneia Carrington.
The daughter of some self indulgent upper middle class fool from some academic backwater, I thought to myself.
She seemed to see my thought.
'My father was a classicist, and thought it was the 1840s and not the 1940s, but actually it's a good name. Iphigeneia was quite a woman. She was almost sacrificed by her father.
'I know,' I said.
'Good, then you're not a idiot. Most people are these days.'
'I'm Sebastian Brotherton,' I said.
'That's a good name; the Biblical...' she paused a moment and then said, 'and the proletarian.' She was repaying me for my thought.
I smiled. I did have proletarian origins; or I would have had, had I been born in the 1940's like her; but of course, ever since the 60's we have all been middle class. But I did not think that I was epic enough to have anything Biblical about me.
'Are you busy now? There's a cafΓ© down the road that isn't too bad. I haven't had a decent conversation in weeks.
'No, I'm not busy,' I said, 'and I haven't had an interesting conversation for a couple of weeks either.'
'Only a couple? You're lucky. Would you like to join me for coffee?'
I thought that a conversation with Iphigeneia Carrington would be an interesting one.
'Yes, I will. Thank you.'
We walked the short distance down the road to the cafΓ© and made small talk about the church service.
The cafΓ© looked nice. We went in. We found a table and sat down. A waitress quickly came and took our order.
Iphigeneia Carrington didn't look quite like the typical old maid at church, but she didn't look too far away from it either; a middle aged Archangel, slightly soiled, perhaps. There was a look in her eyes that was not the kind of look that I associate with old maids at church. They make me think of repression and frustration and a final drying up from lack of use. She did not suggest that to me at all. She looked alive. There was frankness and a spark in her eyes. It was the first thing that was attractive about her.
She was attractive. She had made no attempt to appear younger than she was. She was well preserved, for sure, and she dressed stylishly and she had chosen clothes that suited well not only a woman of her age, but her personally. They were understated. She wore light make up and I noticed that her fingernails were coloured with a soft red nail varnish. The tone was just right; a shade brighter and it would have looked like contrived glamour and it would not have suited her, a shade lighter, and it would barely have been noticeable.
She wanted to find out about me. She began by telling me that she liked a man who dressed well. Clothes are my weakness. I had dressed slightly more formally than usual. Even those who think that they are not very religious think that they shouldn't go to church looking too scruffy. I had worn a pale brown suit, well cut, and a white polo shirt. A tie would have seemed a little too formal, for me anyway.
She asked me about myself and I explained that I am an academic at a university in the North of England and I'd been given a semester off to do research and I got lucky and was given an associate fellowship by one of the colleges, and so there I was. The scholarship meant that I could have a room in college free and eat in the dining room, three meals a day. I had three months there and I had been there for two weeks. I told her that besides studying all day long, I didn't have much else to do in this small city, or anyone to do it with. So I decided to go to church. I hadn't been for years, not even to a wedding.
'And going to church was the best thing you could find to entertain yourself?'
'Well, it is Sunday morning,' I said.
'I used to go every week,' she said, 'but that young idiot of a vicar. I can't stand him. It's all sentimental love thy neighbour nonsense. A sermon should make the congregation think.'
'So why did you come today?'
'It's Sunday morning and I had nothing else to do either. But I'm going to Greece and Turkey next week for a month.'
'Great,' I said; 'where in Turkey? I've been to Istanbul. It's beautiful.'