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AURELIUS



The gym lay beneath Mayfair like a secret chapel, a sanctum sunk into white stone and discretion. It was called Aurelius, a name chosen, one suspected, less for the Roman emperor than for the suggestion of gold without ostentation. The ceilings were high enough to allow humility to breathe; the mirrors were cut not to compliment but to instruct. Marble veined like old parchment cooled the soles of the feet, and the air carried the indistinct, subtle scent of eucalyptus and money well behaved.

 

Aurelius was not a place for improvement. It was a place for maintenance. The men who came here did not seek transformation; they sought confirmation.

 

Two young men were already in motion.

 

Sebastian Ashcombe, Viscount Mereford, ran with the bored precision of one who had been taught from boyhood that even exertion must never look like pleading. His hair—dark, civilised—refused to sweat in public. The silk-cotton vest he wore had been made in Naples and altered in Savile Row, the sort of garment that advocated athleticism without ever confessing to effort. His running shoes, scandalously understated, were the colour of old bone.

 

He ran as though history were watching and had expectations. Which, in his case, it did.

 

Beside him, adjusting the incline on a neighbouring treadmill, was Theodore “Theo” Langford-Smythe, heir presumptive to a banking fortune so old it had once funded wars and now funded quiescence. Theo’s build was slighter, his elegance more scholastic. He wore black—always black—not as rebellion but as a philosophical position. His vest bore no logo. Logos were for people who wished to be recognised.

 

Theo believed admission was a form of moral failure, second only to enthusiasm.

 

At a polite distance stood their butlers: Pembroke for Sebastian, a man whose eyebrows alone could convey a memorandum; and Huxley for Theo, taller, greyer, and so composed he seemed less employed than eternal. They hovered with chilled Voss bottles wrapped in linen, towels folded with the tenderness usually reserved for newborns or treaties.

 

Sebastian increased the speed and said, conversationally, as though discussing the weather in Provence, “Have you ever noticed, Theo, that Cédric Klapisch does not make films about people meeting, but about people colliding politely?”

 

It was an opening gambit of the sort perfected at Oxford: apparently casual, actually diagnostic.

 

Theo smiled, though his breathing remained steady. “Ah. L’Auberge espagnole as social physics. Erasmus students as subatomic particles.”

“And therefore unstable,” Sebastian added contemplatively, “decay is built into the premise.”

Theo slanted his head. “Yes. They arrive believing Europe will enlarge them. Instead it dissolves them. Which is far more honest.”

“Europe,” Sebastian said, “is always honest after the fact. Before that, it prefers theory.”

“Precisely,” Sebastian replied, “everyone thinks it’s about youth and chaos and Spain. It isn’t. It’s about borrowed spheres. Temporary identities. The terror of discovering that you are provisional.”

 

Provisional, like governments. Like marriages. Like convictions held before thirty.

 

Theo reached for his towel, nodded once to Huxley, dabbed his forehead. 

 

“And that, of course, is why we liked it when we were insufferably young. We thought ourselves permanent.”

“Youth,” Sebastian said, “mistakes duration for depth.”

 

They ran on. The mirrors multiplied them into a small dynasty of exertion.

 

“What I find rarely remarked upon,” Sebastian continued, “is that Pot Luck is not European optimism. It is administrative melancholy. Forms. Passports. Bureaucracy as fate.”

“Kafka,” Theo said, “but with better wine and inferior despair.”

“And worse consequences,” Sebastian replied, “the tragedy is not oppression, but compliance. Everyone fills out the forms willingly.”

 

Theo laughed, a low, dry sound.

 

“Trust you to romanticise paperwork.”

“I’m serious,” Sebastian said, “the flat is not a home. It’s a holding pen. They orbit one another not out of love, but because the walls are thin and the rent is shared. It’s accidental intimacy. The most candid kind.”

“Accidental,” Theo mused, “and therefore intolerable to people who believe intimacy should be curated.”

 

Theo adjusted the incline again, punishing himself marginally.

 

“That explains Russian Dolls, then. Everyone thinks it’s about growing up. It’s actually about discovering that one’s emotional furniture no longer fits the room.”

“Which is the true cruelty of adulthood,” Sebastian said, “you keep the furniture, lose the room, and are blamed for the inconvenience.”

Sebastian glanced sideways, approvingly. “Yes. The sequel is not temporal—it’s spatial. Paris instead of Barcelona. Maturity instead of exuberance. Same souls. Less noise.”

“Less noise,” Theo said, “but more echo. Which is infinitely harder to ignore.”

 

Pembroke stepped forward, handed Sebastian a bottle. Sebastian accepted it without breaking stride, murmured thanks as one might to gravity. 

 

Theo went on, “What strikes me about Les Poupées russes is the cruelty of its tenderness. Klapisch allows his characters to succeed just enough to feel the embarrassment of having wanted more.”

“Success,” Sebastian replied, “is merely desire that has learned to apologise for itself.”

 

They ran in silence for a moment, the machines humming like discreet confidants. And in that silence, oddly, other areas seemed to open.

 

A Parisian apartment, for instance. Tall windows. Late light. Somewhere between takes, an actor sat alone, listening to the hum of his own refrigerator as though it were dialogue. He had been instructed not to perform loneliness, only to withstand it. Klapisch had said very little to him—only that loneliness was already articulate and did not require emphasis. The actor grasped, with a shiver of humility, that he was not playing a role but lending his body to an abeyance. Cinema, here, was not spectacle but moral listening.

 

Listening, in Klapisch’s cinema, was a radical act—almost impolite in a culture addicted to declaration.

 

Back in the gym, Sebastian slowed his pace, stepped off with aristocratic finality. Pembroke was already there, towel presented like a sacrament.

 

“And then,” Sebastian said, wiping his hands, “there is Paris.” 

Theo exhaled. “Yes. The film everyone pretends is an ensemble piece.”

“It’s a city contemplating its own mortality,” Sebastian said, “the characters are symptoms. The heart patient merely gives Paris permission to be afraid.”

Theo nodded. “A city on the examination table. Streets as veins. Cafés as capillaries. Everyone rushing, no one listening.”

“Listening,” Sebastian said softly, “would require Paris to accept limits. Cities, like empires, find this undignified.”

 

Another expanse. Another life. The actress from stared at her phone’s darkened screen, her own face faintly reflected. She thought of how radical it had been to play a woman whose interior life was not redeemed—no grand ambition, no cinematic salvation. Klapisch had trusted stillness. He had trusted her face to remain unresolved. She understood then that he filmed the unfinished not as failure, but as dignity.

 

Sebastian slowed further, leaning against the machine. “What people miss,” he said, “is that Paris is the first time Klapisch admits time will win.”

“Which is why Back to Burgundy feels so restrained,” Theo replied, “no city this time. Just land.”

“Land,” Sebastian said, “has never believed in progress. It merely tolerates it.”

 

They moved to the free weights, iron cold and judicial. Theo lay back on the bench; Sebastian stood above him, attentive but unintrusive.

 

“Ah, Burgundy,” Sebastian said, “heritage without nostalgia. Siblings circling a vineyard like reluctant heirs to a crown they did not ask for.”

Theo lifted, controlled, precise. “It’s a film about succession where the vines understand continuity better than the people. The land is patient. Humans are seasonal.”

“And therefore melodramatic,” Sebastian added, “we experience entropy personally.”

 

On another set, years later or earlier—time was uncooperative in Klapisch’s world—actors moved through time, the colours of it. Between scenes, one of them felt something uncanny: as though the future itself were watching, taking notes. Klapisch spoke not of narrative, but of obligation. You are not acting for now, he said mildly. You are acting for what comes after us. The actor understood then that this was not cinema as memory, but cinema as stewardship.

 

Stewardship, Theo reflected, was merely aristocracy stripped of ardour and forced into ethics.

 

Huxley handed Theo his water. Theo drank, reflective. “And then comes Deux moi. Which everyone calls small.”

“Only because loneliness is quieter than tragedy,” Sebastian replied.

“And because it refuses to announce itself,” Theo added, “loneliness has dreadful manners.”

 

They re-racked the weights.

 

Someone, Somewhere,” Theo said, “is the most aristocratic of his films.”

Sebastian raised an eyebrow. “Do explain.”

“It’s about parallel lives never touching,” Theo said, “which is essentially our entire class structure rendered tender instead of brutal.”

Sebastian laughed softly. “You are suggesting we live in a Klapisch film?”

“I am suggesting,” Theo said, standing now, closer, “that we are always one misaddressed email away from familiarity.”

 

Around them, Aurelius continued its muted ballet of privilege. The mirrors observed without dictum, as though aware that judgement would be redundant.

 

“You realise,” Theo added, “that Klapisch is doing what Michelangelo did.”

Sebastian paused. “Removing excess?”

“Exactly,” Theo said, “Michelangelo carved tension between flesh and eternity. Klapisch carves it between people and time. He doesn’t impose vision—he excavates it.”

Sebastian considered this. “A modern Michelangelo of the visual medium,” he said, “working not in marble, but in glances.”

Pembroke cleared his throat, guardedly. “My lord. Your meeting.”

Sebastian nodded, then looked at Theo. “Another day?”

Theo picked up his coat, impeccably cut. “Always.”

 

As they walked out—two young men shaped by affluence, reflection, and a cinema that refused easy answers—the mirrors behind them multiplied their absence. Somewhere between Parisian kitchens, Burgundian soil, lonely apartments, and future-facing sets, time seemed to halt, uncertain whether it was being remembered or anticipated.

 


 

Sebastian: Mayfair to Kensington

 

The Bentley accepted Sebastian without comment, as it accepted everything: authority, inheritance, fatigue disguised as taste. The door closed with that particular sound—less a fuss than an agreement—and immediately the world softened. Leather. Walnut. Taciturnity trained to obey.

 

Mayfair released him slowly, as it always did, like a host who believes too much haste is vulgar. Brook Street, then Davies. The geometry of wealth held steady: clean lines, doors that did not explain themselves, façades that inferred permanence without ever promising it. Sebastian watched it all pass as though from a great height, though the car barely moved.

 

Klapisch had taught him—though no one would ever say such a thing aloud—that places were not settings but arguments.

 

Berkeley Square drifted by, trees dark and disciplined, their winter branches presenting patience. He thought of L’Auberge espagnole again—not the flat, not the jokes, but the terror beneath it: the moment when a place stops welcoming you and begins asking what you intend to become. Sebastian had first felt that terror not in Spain, but here, years ago, when Mayfair had stopped feeling like a birthright and started feeling like a test he had never revised for.

 

The car turned west. Park Lane opened itself like a thesis statement: Hyde Park to one side, the hotels to the other—nature methodical, luxury impersonating hospitality. He remembered Russian Dolls then, not as a sequel but as a reckoning. The realisation that one does not outgrow one’s earlier selves; one merely relocates them. They follow. They sit muted in the back of the mind, like old furniture kept for reasons one no longer remembers.

 

The lights along the park smeared smoothly across the glass. Manoeuvre without drama. He thought of Paris, of the way Klapisch had filmed the city not as a romance but as a body—ageing, self-conscious, suddenly aware of its own breath. Sebastian understood now why it had unsettled him so deeply. It was the first film that had allowed him to imagine his own life not as a trajectory but as a circulation. No climax. No redemption. Just movement and cessation.

 

At Knightsbridge, the shops were already closing, their windows still lit, performing relevance for no one. Consumption as afterimage. He recalled Back to Burgundy, the vineyard, the siblings circling something older than their ambitions. The land had not needed them. That had been the shock. Sebastian had spent his life believing that buttressing implied necessity. Klapisch had suggested otherwise: that continuity was indifferent to intention.

 

The car slid into Kensington, broader streets, softer certainty. Houses that pretended to domesticity while practising prudence. Somewhere behind him, Mayfair folded back into itself, already forgetting him.

 

By the time the Bentley stopped, Sebastian understood why those films had mattered. They had given him acquiescence to stop mistaking arrival for meaning. They had named the unobtrusive verity he had never dared articulate: that his life, for all its polish, was comprised of crossings—corridors between radiuses he would never fully inhabit.

 

Klapisch had not judged him for this. That was the mercy.

 


 

Theo: Under the Shower

 

The water came down hard at first, unnegotiated, striking Theo’s shoulders with a blunt uprightness he preferred to mirrors. Steam gathered quickly, blurring the lines of the domain, reducing it to heat and sound. He stood still, feet planted, letting the temperature settle into something bearable.

 

Water ran over the collarbones first, traced the shallow hollows he had never filled out, no matter how carefully he trained. His body had always resisted exhibition. It was built for endurance rather than declaration. The water followed that logic, sliding down his chest, over the ribs—each one briefly announced, then forgotten—before collecting at the waist and moving on.

 

Theo closed his eyes.

 

Someone, Somewhere had undone him not because it was sad, but because it refused to insist that sadness required resolution. Under the spray, he felt the same truth play itself out physically. The body, like the film, did not ask to be saved. It asked only to be acknowledged.

 

Water gathered at the small of his back, then ran lower, indifferent, democratic. His muscles loosened, the tautness he carried without vanity finally conceding. He thought of the characters in Deux moi, how they existed inches apart, connected by nothing more vivid than proximity. How radical that had felt. To be seen not as incomplete, but as analogous.

 

Klapisch had trusted the body to think.

 

Theo’s thighs bore the convincing, livid marks of effort—training not for beauty, but for inconspicuousness. The water traced them without interest, as it traced everything else. It did not flatter. It did not accuse. He remembered an actor’s stillness in Paris, the way a man could simply sit, breathe, and allow the city’s clamour to pass through him without interpretation. That, Theo comprehended now, had been the lesson: that presence was not performance.

 

The water thudded against the tiles, relentless. He let it run over his hands, the long fingers, the trivial tremor that came not from weakness but from thought. He had spent his life mastering abstraction—numbers, systems, legacy so vast it had lost narrative—but Klapisch had returned him to the material fact of being alone in a body, in time.

 

As the steam thickened, the space lost its edges. Theo thought of Colours of Time, of acting not for now but for what would follow. The water, he recognised, was doing the same thing. It was not cleansing him for the evening. It was preparing his disappearance. Every drop moved on. None stayed.

 

That was why the films had mattered. They had not promised connection. They had dignified distance. They had hinted that to exist alongside another life—unmerged, unresolved—was not failure, but a form of grace.

 

Theo turned the tap off. The sudden lull was absolute.

 

Water slid from his skin and was gone.

 


 

The Bentley idled for a moment longer than necessary.

 

Sebastian did not step out at once. He remained seated, hands resting nonchalantly on his knees, as though awaiting authorisation from something older than habit. The street outside was still—not empty, but settled. A single window glowed across the way. Somewhere, someone else was also not yet finished with the evening.

 

It came to him then—not as revelation, but as recognition—that belonging was never conferred by place or lineage or even by love. It arrived askance. It was granted in intervals: in collective calms, in quarters borrowed for a period, in conversations that did not conclude but simply learned when to stop.

 

Cédric Klapisch, gently and without pageant, had taught them all the same lesson: That life is constituted not of arrivals, but of crossings. That meaning resides not in resolution, but in adjacency. And that the future, like art, watches us even when we pretend it does not.

 

Sebastian understood now that this watchfulness was not surveillance but care. The future did not demand greatness of him. It required only attention—an ethics of noticing, a willingness to remain present as time passed through him rather than over him.

 

Elsewhere, Theo stood by the open window, his body cooling, the city breathing back into the amplitude. The night air touched his skin with unremarkable kindness. He felt, for the first time in a long while, neither alone nor accompanied, but properly situated—one life among many, streaming coequal, held together by nothing more fragile or more durable than closeness.

 

He thought of the people he would never meet, whose lives would nonetheless brush his own through shared films, shared streets, shared hours lived honourably. The thought did not diminish him. It steadied him.

 

Belonging, he realised, was not being known completely. It was being held incompletely, by a world willing to make latitude for unfinished selves.

 

And so the night continued—automobiles moving through lit avenues of masonry, water drying on warm skin, orbits settling into their shapes—each moment passing into the next without ceremony.

 

No conclusions were drawn. None were required.

 

There was only the reticent assurance that somewhere, between scenes, between people, between now and what comes after, they were already home.

 

  



THE FIDELITY OF FADES


 

The morning lay draped in a kind of gilded calm, the sort you only find in Hyde Park at seven o’clock, before the bankers had finished their protein shakes and the tourists had unclenched their guidebooks. The chestnut trees stood like patrician sentinels, polished by dew, while the gravel paths gleamed with the faint glimmer of rain from the night before. Swans in the Serpentine moved with the measured insolence of duchesses.

 

Arthur Cavendish and Benedict Montrose, both twenty-eight, both inheritors to far too much land and far too little purpose, were running side by side in expensive Lycra that gave them the look of overpaid mercenaries. Their trainers made the gravel crackle.

“Dash it, Ben,” Arthur puffed, “did you see that blasted study about men and barbers? Apparently we are more faithful to the chap who trims our hair than the woman who shares our bed.”

Benedict snorted, cheeks flushed, curls damp with sweat. “Faithful? It’s bloody ecclesiastical, you pompous arse. I’ve had Nigel at St. James’s clip my hair since Eton. The man knows the ridges of my skull better than I do. My ex, on the other hand, couldn’t have told you which side of the bed I favoured if you’d tattooed it on my arse. Damnable business.”

Arthur laughed, nearly tripping on a root disguised as virtue. “And yet—here’s the irony, you hopeless cad—Nigel never once texted me with: We need to talk. He simply gets on with the business of shearing me like a prized Southdown. That, my dear fellow, is fidelity without the infernal dramatics.”

They pounded past the Italian Gardens, fountains sparkling like champagne spilled by angels. The air smelled faintly of wet leaves, dog fur, and the sort of artisanal coffee only ever drunk by hedge-fund managers pretending to be poets.

“You know what it is?” Benedict said, spitting onto the grass with blue-blooded derision. “Trust. You let a man hover a pair of scissors by your jugular for seven straight years without cocking it up—that’s intimacy of the highest bloody order. A girlfriend? Oh, she’ll flounce off the moment you forget an anniversary, but Nigel—Nigel never forgets the grade of my fade. God bless the man.”

Arthur wheezed, half with laughter, half with exertion. “So you are saying marriage should model itself on the barber’s chair? Quiet, dependable, once a month, no blasted quarrels?”

“Precisely,” Benedict replied, slowing near a rose garden, “sit you down, warm towel, soothing silence, job well done. None of this incessant prattling about feelings. Christ on toast, it’s the very model of domestic bliss.”

Arthur bent double, laughing, his breath mingling with the perfume of damp roses. “For God’s sake, Ben, you are making me want to propose to Nigel. Imagine the vows: In scissors and in clippers, till death or baldness do us part.

Benedict grinned wickedly. “And you’d damn well mean it. Though Nigel deserves better than you, you simpering goat.”

Arthur swatted him with the back of his hand. “Better than me? Ha! You vain peacock, the poor devil would retire after one fortnight of your incessant prattle about hairlines.”

At which point, as if conjured by their mock-litany, a tall figure emerged from the mist ahead. Clad in a neat navy tracksuit, jogging with the steady rhythm of a man who cuts hair as precisely as he breathes, came none other than Nigel himself. The Nigel. Scissors’ own high priest, prophet of the perfect taper.

Arthur stopped dead. “Bugger me sideways. Speak of the barber and he shall appear.”

Benedict froze too, suddenly as reverent as an altar boy. “Nigel Montmorency—by Jove, it is him. The Michelangelo of the fringe. The Rembrandt of the razor.”

Nigel gave them a polite nod as he approached, sweatless, serene, the sort of man for whom even sprinting appeared an act of immaculate craftsmanship.

“Morning, gentlemen,” he said in his steady baritone, as if announcing the beginning of a haircut.

Arthur blurted, “Nigel, old chap, we were just—er—discussing our undying loyalty to you.”

Nigel raised one eyebrow, with the calm disdain of a man who has endured aristocratic confessions before. “So long as you book your appointments on time, Mr Cavendish, loyalty is assumed.”

Benedict nearly swooned. “You see, Arthur? No drama, no bloody melodrama. Just cold, dependable certainty. The man is a philosopher in clippers.”

Arthur straightened, flushed. “Nigel, if society collapses, if governments fall, if marriages fail—promise me you’ll still be there on Jermyn Street with your scissors.”

Nigel allowed himself the faintest smile, which on any other face would have been rapture. “Hair grows regardless of civilisation, Mr Cavendish. One must always be ready.”

With that, Nigel dashed on, disappearing into the mist like some barbering demigod, leaving the two young men trembling with a kind of comic awe.

Benedict exhaled a shaky laugh. “Christ alive, Arthur, I feel as though we’ve just seen God.”

Arthur wiped his brow. “Not God, you fool. Better. God never got my parting straight.”

The pair jogged on, grinning like schoolboys who had glimpsed eternity through a pair of scissors—until both their pockets began to vibrate. The cheerful ringtone of duty.

Arthur groaned, yanking out his phone. “It’s Amelia. Bloody marvellous.” He thumbed it on. “Darling?”

Amelia’s voice came crisp, imperious. “Arthur, where the devil are you? The decorator’s arrived early, and he’s threatening to paint the drawing room a shade called ‘Tuscan Blush.’ If you’re not back this instant to veto it, I shall drown myself in the Serpentine.”

Arthur winced. “Yes, darling. On my way. Immediately. Don’t touch the bloody blush.”

Meanwhile Benedict had lifted his own phone, rolling his eyes heavenward. “Yes, Charlotte?”

Charlotte’s tone was sharper than cut glass. “Benedict, you left the Pomeranian without breakfast. He’s whimpering like an orphan and I’ve a Pilates class in twenty minutes. Get back now or the poor creature will perish of neglect.”

Benedict mouthed silently to Arthur, for Christ’s sake, before answering meekly, “Of course, my love. I’ll run, sprint, bloody teleport.”

Both men ended their calls in sheepish silence. The park, once filled with swanlike serenity, now felt like a stage on which they had been caught out, two clowns dragged back into the comedy of real life.

Arthur sighed. “So much for eternal fidelity to Nigel.”

Benedict shook his head, already turning towards the nearest exit. “Bugger loyalty, old boy. Domestic tyranny trumps barbers every time.”

Arthur muttered as they broke into a reluctant jog, “Nigel would never have stopped a run for bloody Tuscan Blush.”

“And he’d sooner starve himself than whimper like that damned Pomeranian,” Benedict added darkly.

 

And so they went, heirs to dynasties but prisoners to decorators and dogs, trudging back not to the temple of Nigel but to the altar of modern love—its scissors blunt, its towel stone cold.

 



SCAFFOLDING


 

The house in Belgravia had the stillness of a cathedral that had learned to charge admission.

Its walls—ivory, unblemished, faintly disdainful—held the scent of beeswax, old money, and something metallic beneath, like a blade wrapped in silk. The chandeliers were lowered to a conspiratorial glow, as though the light itself wished not to be overheard. Outside, London murmured politely, unaware that its future was being sipped from crystal tumblers.

“I find it vulgar,” said Lady Aurelia Finch-Harrow, touching her glass without lifting it, “that people still believe power announces itself.”

Her voice was cultivated to the point of unreality—an accent sharpened by finishing schools and softened by contempt. She sat like a painting that had learned to speak.

Sir Malcolm Reeve smiled, not because he agreed, but because disagreement was an indulgence one could afford only in private. “Power,” he replied, adjusting his cufflinks with surgical precision, “has always preferred to dress as necessity. Kings used God. We use algorithms.”

Across from them, Matteo Ricci—Italian by birth, Swiss by inclination—watched the fire rearrange itself in the marble hearth. His face bore the untroubled pallor of men who observe history rather than suffer it.

“You are both sentimental,” Matteo said mildly, “power no longer persuades. It administers.”

Lady Aurelia turned to him, amused. “Administration is persuasion in its final, perfected form.”

A pause followed, dense as velvet. Somewhere in the house, a clock chimed, though no one had wound it in years. Time, here, was decorative.

Sir Malcolm leaned forward. “Tell us, Matteo. You’ve been circling the continent again. Advising presidents who pretend they still matter. What is the newest heresy?”

Matteo’s fingers traced the rim of his glass, leaving a crescent of condensation. “The heresy,” he said, “is the belief that chaos must be conquered. In truth, chaos is far more useful unmanaged. One need only curate it.”

Lady Aurelia laughed, a sound like porcelain tapping porcelain. “You make it sound like flower arranging.”

“Exactly,” Matteo replied, “one does not command the roses. One trims.”

She regarded him keenly. “And who, pray, is being trimmed?”

Matteo met her gaze. “Everyone who believes they are choosing.”

Sir Malcolm exhaled. “Still the same thesis, then. The people are not governed; they are nudged. Like cattle with degrees.”

“Degrees are ornamental now,” Matteo said, “like titles.”

Lady Aurelia stiffened, though her smile remained intact. “Careful. Even ornaments can cut.”

Matteo inclined his head. “That is why they are kept.”

Another silence. This one felt intentional.

Sir Malcolm rose and crossed to the window, peering at the darkened square below. “Do you know,” he said thoughtfully, “that this house was requisitioned during the Blitz? Strategists slept in these rooms. Maps were spread on this very floor.”

“And yet,” Lady Aurelia murmured, “no bombs fell here.”

“Of course not,” Matteo said, “the city protects what it needs.”

She turned sharply. “And what does it need now?”

Matteo smiled, but there was no warmth in it. “Narratives. Fear, elegantly rationed. Outrage, delivered in manageable doses. Above all—plausible villains.”

Sir Malcolm frowned. “You speak as if this were a theatre.”

“It is,” Matteo replied, “the mistake is thinking there is an audience.”

Lady Aurelia stood, her silk gown whispering like a confidence being betrayed. She walked to the fireplace, examining a small bronze sculpture—a Roman general without a face.

“I invited you here,” she said slowly, “because I was told you understood collapse.”

Matteo’s eyes flickered. “Collapse is merely a change of management.”

“And yet,” she continued, “the markets tremble. The streets grow restless. Even my gardeners have begun asking questions.”

Sir Malcolm turned. “Gardeners always do, eventually.”

Lady Aurelia ignored him. “I want to know,” she said, fixing Matteo with a stare sharpened by lineage, “whether we are approaching the end of something—or merely its refinement.”

Matteo considered this. The fire sighed. The clock, traitorous, chimed again.

“You are asking the wrong question,” he said at last, “the end is not coming. It has already been distributed.”

Sir Malcolm laughed uneasily. “Distributed?”

“Like a virus,” Matteo said, “or an idea.”

Lady Aurelia’s voice softened. “And our role in this distribution?”

Matteo stood, smoothing his jacket. For the first time, he looked almost weary.

“You are not distributors,” he said gently, “you are proof of concept.”

The room seemed to contract.

Sir Malcolm’s smile faltered. “Proof of—what, exactly?”

“That governance can survive without belief,” Matteo replied, “that legitimacy is optional. That luxury itself can be weaponised as a distraction.”

Lady Aurelia felt, absurdly, cold. “You speak as though we are expendable.”

Matteo picked up his coat. “Expendable things are destroyed. You will be preserved.”

“For what?” she asked.

“For contrast.”

He moved toward the door. Before leaving, he turned back, his reflection briefly multiplying in the gilt mirrors.

“Oh,” he added, almost kindly, “one more thing. The conversation we are having—it has already been leaked.”

Sir Malcolm stared. “To whom?”

Matteo’s smile returned, thin as a razor. “To everyone who thinks it confirms their suspicions.”

The door closed with a sound like a verdict.

Lady Aurelia sank into her chair. The bronze general seemed to watch her now.

“Well,” Sir Malcolm said softly, “that was… illuminating.”

She looked at him, eyes bright with something between fury and awe. “Do you realise,” she said, “that we may no longer be the architects?”

Sir Malcolm returned to his seat, lifting his glass at last. “My dear Aurelia,” he said, voice steady, as outside, London continued breathing—obedient, restless, unaware that its most luxurious rooms had just been demoted to footnotes, and somewhere, far beyond Belgravia, chaos was being trimmed into shape, “architects were always a myth. We are merely the scaffolding.”

 


MUJH SE KISI NE POOCHA NAHIN - NO ONE EVER ASKED ME



MUJH SE KISI NE POOCHA NAHIN
main kya chahta hoon.
 
Sab ne bataya
mujhe kya hona chahiye,
kis tarah jeena chahiye,
kis cheez par muskuraana chahiye.
 
Magar kisi ne yeh nahin poocha—
jab main tanha hota hoon,
toh kis cheez se darta hoon?
Kis khamoshi se main roz guzarta hoon?
 
Mujh se kisi ne poocha nahin
main kis cheez se thak chuka hoon.
Woh bojh kaun sa hai
jo main roz bina shikayat uthaata hoon?
Woh sapna kaunsa hai
jo main sirf is liye chhod deta hoon
kyunki use chaahne ki ijazat nahin hoti?
 
Sab ne dekha
main sambhal jaata hoon.
Magar kisi ne yeh nahin poocha—
har baar sambhalne ke baad
main kitna toot jaata hoon?
 
Mujh se kisi ne poocha nahin
ke agar main ruk jaaun,
toh kya koi mere saath rukega?
Agar main kamzor pad jaaun,
toh kya mujhe bhi utna hi haqdaar samjha jaayega
jitna mazboot rehne par samjha jaata hoon?
 
Kya meri khamoshi raza hai
ya bas aadat?
Kya meri muskurahat sach hai
ya sirf ek zarurat?
 
Mujh se kisi ne poocha nahin
main kya chahta hoon—
shayad is liye
kyunki sab ko yeh lagta hai
ke mujhe bas sab kuchh theek rakhna aata hai.
 
Lekin agar kabhi koi pooch le—
toh kya woh sun paayega
woh jawaab
jo main khud se bhi darte hue chhupaata hoon?

 
A modest endeavour of mine: an English rendering of my Urdu poem, offered with all due humility.

 
NO ONE EVER ASKED ME
what I want.
 
They told me instead
what I should become,
how a life ought to be lived,
at which moments I must smile,
and for whose comfort.
 
No one ever asked—
when I am alone,
what shape my fear takes,
what hush I walk through
each day, unlit and unnamed.
 
No one ever asked me
what exhausts me.
What weight I shoulder
without protest,
or which hope I set down quietly
because wanting it
was never permitted.
 
They saw that I gathered myself,
time and again,
mistook the act for wholeness.
No one ever asked—
afterward,
what splintered out of sight.
 
No one ever asked me
if I stopped,
would anyone pause beside me.
If I faltered,
would I still be counted worthy,
or only praised
for remaining unbroken.
 
Is my silence agreement,
or merely rehearsal?
Is my smile sincerity,
or survival?
 
No one ever asked me
what I want—
perhaps because
those who hold things together
are assumed
not to need holding.
 
And if someone ever does ask,
will they listen closely enough
to hear the answer
I keep buried,
even from myself,
for fear it might be real.
 
 

FEIGNING IGNORANCE – FINDING TRUTH


On the Subtle Art of Seeming Foolish

 

There is, in our time, an almost feverish compulsion to appear clever. We esplanade our education, lace our sentences with fashionable jargon, and measure our worth by the applause of those who recognise our wit. Yet, what is seldom recognised—indeed, what is most often despised—is that peculiar and paradoxical gift: the ability of the truly intelligent man to play the fool.

 

At first glance, this may sound like cowardice, or worse, duplicity. Why should a man of quick understanding conceal his sharpness beneath the mask of simplicity? The answer lies in a truth too seldom acknowledged: a mind that is always eager to display itself learns little of the world. Like a torch too bright, it blinds its own bearer. The man who wishes to know men must, at times, dim his light, so that others, thinking themselves unobserved, may reveal their colours.

 

Consider the fisherman with his bait. He does not fling his net with violent haste, declaring to the fish his every intention. He waits, motionless, almost invisible. It is not the force of his strength, but the art of his disguise, that brings his quarry to hand. So it is with the wise man who feigns ignorance: he becomes, to the vain and the proud, an easy prey. They rush to correct him, to teach him, to patronise him—and in so doing, they spill forth their secrets and betray their inner selves. He, all the while, is listening.

 

There are, I think, four distinct treasures buried in this art. First, the mask of simplicity permits us to behold the unvarnished truth of others. Men are never so unguarded as when they believe themselves to be the master in the room. Second, it allows one to play the fool in order to catch the fool; for nothing ensnares the egotistical like the belief that they are cleverer than their company. Third, it is a key to hidden knowledge: people will pour out information when convinced that their listener is harmlessly naïve. Fourth, it awakens in others the ancient instinct to instruct, to explain, to guide—and from this impulse flows a harvest of wisdom that no interrogation could have wrung.

 

It is worth noticing the asymmetry here. A clever man may don the garb of simplicity, but a simpleton cannot with any success impersonate intelligence. The one is like an actor who, knowing the whole play, can perform any part. The other has no script at all, and thus cannot rise beyond the narrow limits of his own mind.

 

The danger, of course, lies in excess. There is a thin line between strategic humility and the permanent habit of belittling one’s own gifts. To make oneself a fool for a moment is astuteness; to become one, for fear of seeming conceited, is cowardice. The object is not to deceive for vanity’s sake, but to learn, to protect, and at times to correct by indirection.

 

History gives us many examples, but let one suffice. When Odysseus, that cunning king of Ithaca, entered Troy disguised as a beggar, he was scorned, mocked, and overlooked. Yet, beneath that cloak of rags lay a mind calculating every word, weighing every gesture, until at last he triumphed where brute force had failed. It was not by trumpeting his percipience that he prevailed, but by cloaking it in foolishness.

 

We might do well to remember that the wisest teachers, prophets, and saints often spoke in parables—simple tales of seeds and sheep, which the proud dismissed as childish. Yet hidden in that humble dress lay truths that have outlived empires.

 

The world, then, is a theatre in which the wise man need not always insist on playing Hamlet. Sometimes, it is better—far better—to play the fool.