Common Ground

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Common Ground Page 28

by Rob Cowen


  Gradually, and I mean painfully gradually, the injections start to work. The bleeding slows and then ceases altogether. After an hour Rosie stirs and starts to come around. Two more and her colour returns. Another and she’s sitting up for the toast and sugary hot chocolate Jean has brought in on a tray. When I hand Thomas back to her, she’s the one asking, ‘Are you OK?’ I’m the pale thing now, my arms cramped and trembling from holding the baby in the same position for the last four hours. Rosie, on the other hand, remembers nothing and is confused at where the time has gone. ‘I think Dad might need a hug,’ explains Jean and she comes over and puts her arms around me. After a moment I relent and sink into her hold. Wrapped in that human warmth, watching Rosie and Thomas burbling happily to each other again, I feel the fear withdrawing. Over Jean’s shoulder, the animal has slipped from the room. There are other wards and beds to prowl; other hearts to bless and brutalise.

  It’s not far off two o’clock in the morning when I leave. Thomas and Rosie have been whisked off to a ward with the promise of more hot chocolate and buttered toast. But I’m not allowed to go with them. And they won’t let me stay overnight, not even in a chair in reception. ‘Go home,’ the midwives say, laughing, ‘we’ll be watching them. Get some sleep.’ But who are they trying to kid? There’s too much stuff running round my head; too many revelations. I know where I’m going. I thank them all and ask them to pass on my heartfelt gratitude to the doctor busy bestowing calmness further down the corridor.

  Outside it has turned deeply cold and the streets are deserted. Not another vehicle as I drive through the oily night, passing under the misted orbs of streetlamps along Skipton Road then right, down Bilton Lane. At the crossing point I stop, pull on my jacket from the boot and walk to the same fence I hunkered by on New Year’s Eve. Wiping away the drop-in-temperature-tears with a sleeve, my eyes adjust. The silence thickens. Aside from a pylon showing as a deeper geometric darkness against the sky, the edge-land is an indistinct mass of blurry, coffee-black, all looming presence, distance and intimacy, exaggerated by Bilton’s orange-washed roads and the few houselights still blazing over the fences. It is almost exactly like I found it those many months ago, only it doesn’t feel strange any more.

  When I first came to this spot I was seeking somewhere I might belong. I felt the urge to align myself with a place that, like me, seemed caught between states. Mapping this patch of ground has made it part of my life; we have blurred and planed together. It has altered my internal landscape even as I’ve watched it change. Perhaps this is a process that we all go through at some point, a kind of internal stock-take that occurs when confronted with the tectonic shifts in our existence, like moving away or impending fatherhood. There are times when we need to lose illusions and work out who we are, how we got here and where we’re going. And now I realise how the outside world can inform our inside world. The common ground and edge-lands that surround our homes may not provide our food or fuel any more, but once unlocked, they can still sustain us, revealing the complex intermeshing between human and nature – showing us what we are, what we are not and how these two things are inseparable.

  Despite the darkness, I know what lies beyond the fence. And, as I breathe, I pull this region close to me, drawing it into my lungs, conjuring visions of the precise shape of far hills, the lane and the woods, the hanging, grey silence of viaduct and gorge, the shuffling mice in the meadow, the dormant vetch seed in the soil, the starling shifting its hold on an electricity cable, the silent imprinting of a badger paw beside the holloway. I think of how beautifully telling it is that for all my time spent recording this edge-land’s manifestation, of witnessing its histories and inhabitants coming to life, it still required that most human experience, a child being born, to feel the true sense and shape of being animal. And how, conversely, I feel all the more human for it.

  Nearly twenty-four hours have elapsed since I stood in my kitchen waiting for the light to come, wrestling with the overbearing bleakness in this world. Sometimes it is impossible to come to terms with the things our species has done, and what it is capable of doing, but it can be easy to forget to hope too. And this is what I’m left with here and now. I write and circle a word in my notebook. HOPE. Even after everything there is hope because deep down people do care. People are good. They take jobs that mean staying awake all night watching a ward of sleeping mothers and their newborn children, or they travel halfway around the world far away from their own families to care for the sick and dying on another continent. If someone stumbles on an escalator or falls in the street, the first instinct is not to steal their bag but to help them. I’ve witnessed that countless times and never before appreciated it for what it really is. To touch and reassure, to hasten over and bear-hug an emotional father in a maternity ward, kindness, compassion, the selflessness, the care, the heeding – these are natural states too. We need to fight to keep them alive and foremost, not surrender them to the other impulses our species carries within: selfishness, self-interest and one-upmanship.

  As I was leaving the hospital I saw a face I recognised. A man in his thirties leaning with his back against the wall in a lower corridor, his eyes staring, brows jumping, as though he was running through a very serious conversation with himself. It was Danny, one of the dads-to-be who’d attended the same series of baby-care classes as us a few weeks back. After a long and difficult labour his wife had just birthed a boy. We talked for a few minutes and he looked a little shaky, frightened and tired, so I put my arm round his shoulder. He smiled and then, suddenly and forcibly, sobbed. ‘Sorry,’ he said immediately, ‘I’m sorry.’ There are times when the distance between us becomes noticeably less, when you recognise the humanity in others and feel the common thread that knots and ties us all together. In the same way the zoomed-out eyes of those first astronauts were gifted a unique perspective of this planet – the preciousness and precariousness of a small pale-blue dot in cold, sparse space – I feel the cogs that turn unstoppably under the surface; the connection we all share from living out our days together and, at the same time, the beauty and viciousness those days entail. I think of how we owe it to ourselves to make the best of it all during our short-lived stay. And I wonder whether, if we could hold on to such truths, the answer to that question – what kind of world are we bringing you into? – might yet be different.

  Exhaustion and crashing emotions are catching up with me. I start back for the car, looking up at the sleeping town as I walk. The lights shivering and twinkling against the black remind me of those images you see of distant galaxies forming. I think of Thomas asleep in a crib with Rosie curled next to him, then of the endless potentiality within our grasp. And for a moment the world seems right.

  ‘Oh and by the way, did you hear?’ Rosie asks. An intense, excited, delirious week has already passed since we brought Thomas home. For the umpteenth time, changing his nappy is a two-person job, requiring fresh Babygro, blanket, cardigan, hat, even a sponging-down of our bedroom wall.

  ‘Hear what?’

  ‘It was on the news at lunchtime. They’re calling off the badger cull.’

  It’s a funny feeling that follows, like just after you yawn or sneeze: a little rush, then a stolen second of stunned reflection.

  Later, while Rosie feeds Thomas upstairs, I flick on the kitchen radio and listen to the Commons announcement being replayed in full. Turns out it is less an abandonment, more a stay of execution. At the dispatch box Owen Paterson sounds as defiant as ever, emphasising it is a ‘postponement’ until next summer, resolutely insisting that there is no shift in government policy. But there is a shift, and I can feel it. I suspect he can too. Common sense, public conscience and scientific reason have prevailed and prevented – for now, at least. Who would have thought it? Forcing a change through scrutiny, assessment of evidence, resilience, determination and action; a national show of compassion towards the non-human world – sometimes even a little victory can go a long way to restoring your faith. It lighte
ns the horizon, even as the days draw in and darken.

  I am dreaming of the edge-land again, down in the midst of Scots pines and the cold, scrub-scattered banks. I’m walking by the river upstream, towards the viaduct, following something. But what, I can’t quite tell. A faint shift in the silence is all. The wood is grey and black. The river slips by. And I’m still going. Footstep after footstep. And it’s still going. Another slight fizz ahead, like a rustle, a soft tread on leaves or a leg shifting under a blanket. I roll my head on the pillow and, still dreaming, quicken my pace to reach the trees that lean and stretch from the bank like fingers pointing lazily northwards, over the Nidd. Another movement, this one a snuffle, like a fox cub, and I realise that I’m no longer looking through the trees but down into a dark den or sett. And that whatever is in there is working up to a scream. A pause and my mind reacts like a pilot flame firing in a boiler, yanking me from sleep. My legs kick out from under the duvet; my feet touch carpet and I push and pivot my body, covering the few feet to the Moses basket stationed at the end of our bed. I rub my eyes but there’s nothing to attend to. Thomas has settled himself. No scream erupts. It was probably just wind. He is perfectly happy, snug and swaddled with the fingers of his left hand poking out of the top in a nonchalant wave. I smile and put my finger in his palm, letting him grip it. ‘I’m here,’ I whisper. ‘Daddy’s here’. A rookie move. He clamps down hard and I’m caught. I try to work my hand free but each time I do he stirs, whimpers and makes like he’s about to shriek. I glance over at Rosie who is lost in the duvet and exhausted slumber, her arm tucked under the pillow. Anxious not to disturb her, I give up and stand in the dark watching Thomas sleep, wondering at the indescribable strength of the thing that’s grasped hold of me. It takes a moment to straighten it out, but it’s love, of course. It fills my head, my heart and this whole messy house.

  Epilogue

  THE NOTEBOOK

  It has lain untouched on a low shelf by the door for well over a month. I’ve walked past countless times without incident, yet today I find the notebook has somehow secreted itself into one of the cavernous pockets of my warmest coat. Rummaging for a glove, my nail meets a familiar hard-backed cover. I curl my forefinger under the elastic band that keeps its pages closed, and pull it out with a frown of puzzlement. Hello. How did you get there? Between wrestling on boots and hauling the pushchair out through the narrow hallway, my hand must have instinctively reached out. I shouldn’t be surprised, though; old habits die hard. Sometimes we know ourselves better than we think. This morning, for the first time, I’m walking Thomas down to the edge-land.

  It’s a creaking-cold day. Winter, unblinking, is staring down autumn, frightening it from its perch, chasing it from the woods with first frosts and sharp, fiery light. The sun shows willing but shines weakly from the east as I steer the pushchair down Bilton Lane, stopping every now and then to make sure the boy’s all right. He’s probably a bit overdressed. On top of a thick cardigan I’ve bundled him up in a bright woolly hat, mittens and tucked two blankets under his muffler, but then again we’ve never walked this far from the house before and the air feels distinctly draughty, like a great sash window has been left open to the north. The sky has the same oily rainbow sheen as you find inside oyster shells and it stretches brilliantly behind roofs and telegraph wires, over hard, bare stubble fields, woods and the hills that range away unreachably between the bungalows and semis.

  At the crossing point the two oaks either side of the road have been almost stripped completely. The sun paints branches yellow; beneath, the grass plays dead. Thrushes spill song and dogs bark. I’m grateful for the track they’ve laid over the old railway. The pushchair’s wheels glide over the bitumen in a single, smooth, continuous note. Bikes whistle past us in both directions and light ripples the red, tiled rooftops of Tennyson Avenue. Reaching the meadow, I push us past the pylon and across country to the wood’s edge, where I sit on a fallen pine branch. A few feet away a tiny goldcrest appears and begins working up and down a dead thistle, its Mohican of gold gleaming like a celestial streak. I assume Thomas must be fast asleep from the trundling, but when I turn the pushchair around I find his eyes are staring up in wonder, reflecting the trees and sky, taking everything in. Lucky thing. To have those days ahead when all the world is wide and bright, and all the world is all you can see.

  I reach into my pocket and retrieve the notebook. It is a clutter of things, layered and brown like the earth, its cover wonderfully dirty. I undo its elastic fastening and flick back and forth through its pages, through the maps, scribbles of fox tracks, paragraphs of nineteenth-century railway research, drawings of the weir, a tramp’s babblings, a folded-up brochure for Bilton Hall Nursing Home, dead leaves and squashed deer droppings, dried flower heads and stray Himalayan balsam seeds. There are wobbly, half-completed tables that note the timings of owl calls and the appearance of swifts above the fields; sketches of hares and the compass-point fields of vision matriarchal rabbits adopt when guarding their young. Here, pressed in a margin, is a mayfly’s wing; here a found roach end and a squashed sprig of nettle. Here, a rough outline of a badger’s print. Bound and folded together with it all, my thoughts and feelings and impressions. Brief moments in time. The extraordinary you can find in the ordinary. A changing life in this fleeting, wheeling world.

  In many ways I wish I could have written a neater story but I suppose edge-lands, like our lives, are tangled stories that write themselves. And for all the pages we might fill, nothing comes close to a second of being here.

  We sit quietly, the boy and me, until the goldcrest has gone. After a while I close the notebook, tuck it next to him and turn us both for home.

  You showed me eyebright in the hedgerow,

  Speedwell and travellers joy.

  You showed me how to use my eyes

  When I was just a boy;

  And you taught me how to love a song

  And all you knew of nature’s ways:

  The greatest gifts I have ever known,

  And I use them every day.

  Martin Simpson, ‘Never Any Good’

  Acknowledgements

  The existence of this book is largely attributable to five extraordinary women who collectively birthed, nurtured and provided the space for all that is written here. Firstly my mother, Anne, whose encyclopedic knowledge of, and love for, nature and the outside world opened the door for me a long time ago. She has been a reliable source of information, a library where, mercifully, no fees are incurred, and an inspiration since she dragged my brother and I from our beds to go badger watching on Ilkley Moor. My wife, Rosie, never agreed to the details of our life being so frankly revealed in print and never complained when it became clear they might be. For so many reasons there simply would be no book without her. She is responsible for everything precious in my life, and to her I owe everything. Stephanie Ebdon had the vision to see potential in 150,000 words of scribbled field notes, odds-and-ends and ideas, and then the conviction and patience to find the right publisher. Her support has always been unflinching and hugely important. As has that of my agent, Jessica Woollard, who first believed in my writing many years ago and continues to be the most remarkably insightful, encouraging and brilliant ally and advocate. Last, but most certainly not least, my editor at Hutchinson, Sarah Rigby – a colleague and a good friend. When she undertook this work I doubt she had any idea of the journey we would be taking together, yet she has proved to be the kind of travelling companion every writer dreams of: visionary, loyal, inspiring, attentive and always on hand to console, cajole and put things in order. I am forever grateful to her for sharing with me her talent, her generosity of spirit and her contagious desire to kick at boundaries.

 

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