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Nick Hornby - High Fidelity

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<strong>High</strong> <strong>Fidelity</strong><br />

http://www.fictionbook.ru/author/hornby_nick/high_fidelity/hornby_high_fidelity.html<br />

Page 55 of 112<br />

6/20/2006<br />

“I haven’t got your number.”<br />

“You know you can call me at work. And we’ll arrange to meet and talk properly.”<br />

“OK.”<br />

“Promise”<br />

“Yeah.”<br />

“Because I don’t want this to be the last conversation we have. I know what you’re like.”<br />

But she doesn’t know what I’m like at all: I call her all the time. I call her later that afternoon, when<br />

Barry has gone out to get something to eat and Dick is busy sorting out some mail-order stuff out the<br />

back. I call her after six, when Barry and Dick have gone. When I get home, I call Directory Enquiries<br />

and get Ian’s new number, and I call about seven times, and hang up every time he answers; eventually,<br />

Laura guesses what’s going on and picks up the phone herself. I call her the following morning, and<br />

twice that afternoon, and I call her from the pub that evening. And after the pub I go around to Ian’s<br />

place, just to see what it looks like from the outside. (It’s just another north London three-story house,<br />

although I’ve no idea which story is his, and there are no lights on in any of them, anyway.) I’ve got<br />

nothing else to do. In short, I’ve lost it again, just like I lost it with Charlie, all those years ago.<br />

There are men who call, and men who don’t call, and I’d much, much rather be one of the latter. They<br />

are proper men, the sort of men that women have in mind when they moan about us. It’s a safe, solid,<br />

meaningless stereotype: the man who appears not to give a shit, who gets ditched and maybe sits in the<br />

pub on his own for a couple of evenings, and then gets on with things; and though next time around he<br />

trusts even less than he did, he hasn’t made a fool of himself, or frightened anybody, and this week I’ve<br />

done both of those things. One day Laura’s sorry and guilty, and the next she’s scared and angry, and I<br />

am entirely responsible for the transformation, and it hasn’t done me any good at all. I’d stop if I could,<br />

but I don’t seem to have any choice in the matter: it’s all I think about, all the time. “I know what you’re<br />

like,” Laura said, and she does, kind of: she knows that I’m someone who doesn’t really bother, who has<br />

friends he hasn’t seen for years, who no longer speaks to anybody that he has ever slept with. But she<br />

doesn’t know how you have to work at that.<br />

I want to see them now: Alison Ashworth, who ditched me after three miserable evenings in the park.<br />

Penny, who wouldn’t let me touch her and who then went straight out and had sex with that bastard<br />

Chris Thomson. Jackie, attractive only while she was going out with one of my best friends. Sarah, with<br />

whom I formed an alliance against all the dumpers in the world and who then went and dumped me<br />

anyway. And Charlie. Especially Charlie, because I have her to thank for everything: my great job, my<br />

sexual self-confidence, the works. I want to be a well-rounded human being with none of these knotty<br />

lumps of rage and guilt and self-disgust. What do I want to do when I see them I don’t know. Just talk.<br />

Ask them how they are and whether they have forgiven me for messing them around, when I have<br />

messed them around, and tell them that I have forgiven them for messing me around, when they have<br />

messed me around. Wouldn’t that be great If I saw all of them in turn and there were no hard feelings<br />

left, just soft, squidgy feelings, Brie rather than old hard Parmesan, I’d feel clean, and calm, and ready to<br />

start again.<br />

Bruce Springsteen’s always doing it in his songs. Maybe not always, but he’s done it. You know that<br />

one ‘Bobby Jean,’ off Born in the USA Anyway, he phones this girl up but she’s left town years before<br />

and he’s pissed off that he didn’t know about it, because he wanted to say good-bye, and tell her that he<br />

missed her, and to wish her good luck. And then one of those sax solos comes in, and you get goose<br />

pimples, if you like sax solos. And Bruce Springsteen. Well, I’d like my life to be like a Bruce<br />

Springsteen song. Just once. I know I’m not born to run, I know that the Seven Sisters Road is nothing<br />

like Thunder Road, but feelings can’t be so different, can they I’d like to phone all those people up and<br />

say good luck, and good-bye, and then they’d feel good and I’d feel good. We’d all feel good. That<br />

would be good. Great even.

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