My Bonnie: How dementia stole the love of my life. John Suchet
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Название: My Bonnie: How dementia stole the love of my life

Автор: John Suchet

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Биографии и Мемуары

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isbn: 9780007328437

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СКАЧАТЬ strains of Rachmaninov. In fact, we said nothing. Our eyes held each other for a few moments. I picked up the umbrella and walked back down the slope.

      I have thought about this moment a million times in the more than 30 years since it happened. Bonnie and I have talked about it, laughed over it. It has always led to a repeat performance. Today, as I write about it for the first time, it only brings tears to my eyes.

      Bonnie is pacing round the house and I want to tell her what I am remembering, but I don’t. Why talk of something that will mean nothing to her now, and might make her regret that she can’t remember it?

      But can I really be sure it will mean nothing to her? What if I am wrong, and she does remember it? If she does, it will bring her a lot of pleasure. I decide to test it in as gentle a way as I can.

      I go out onto the terrace, and of course Bon follows me out there. We stroll around for a few moments, then I lean against the table and say, ‘Come here, darling, come here a moment.’ ‘Why?’ ‘I want to ask you something.’

      She walks towards me and stands facing me.

      ‘Do you remember our first kiss?’

      ‘Of course I do.’

      ‘When was it?’

      ‘Er…I don’t know.’

      ‘Take a guess.’

      ‘Five years ago?’

      ‘Yeah!’ I say, raising my arms in triumph. She smiles with satisfaction.

       Chapter 2

      So what did it all mean? It seemed impossible that she might actually be interested in me. Let’s look at the facts. She—a White Anglo-Saxon Protestant born and educated in America. Moi—a rather dark-skinned (olive, I think, is the polite word) Londoner of slightly indeterminate European origin, from around half a dozen Central and Eastern European countries, at least if you go back a couple of generations or so, with a bit of English thrown in, and a totally British upbringing. We had nothing in common, absolutely nothing. Besides, she was married with two sons, to a decent man who, as far as I knew, was a caring father and husband, with a prestigious job that allowed him to provide them with a comfortable life. In short, Bonnie and I were physically, mentally, in every which way possible, polar opposites. What could possibly happen between us, ever?

      Soon after we were finally together, I put these facts to her, in a desperate attempt to try to understand her folly. ‘Look,’ I said, ‘I am utterly different to you, in origin, in looks, probably in everything.’ ‘So?’ she countered. I wasn’t going to be put off. ‘All right, I’m not a blonde, blue-eyed Adonis, you can’t argue against that.’ ‘No, I can’t,’ she said. ‘But I don’t want a blonde blue-eyed Adonis.’ ‘Right,’ I replied, gearing myself up for what I knew would be the knockout punch, ‘I am not six-foot two. OK? However you look at it, I am not bloody six-foot two. Not even on a good day.’ ‘So?’ she said, moving towards me. ‘Look,’ and she nestled her head neatly between my upper chest and my neck. ‘We are a perfect fit.’ ‘Darling, would you like some more tomatoes?’

      ‘I like tomatoes, all right? I like them. But I can’t eat them now while I’m having this lunch.’

      ‘Fine, darling.’

      I couldn’t have known just how perfect the fit would be, in everything, absolutely everything, physical, mental and emotional. But before I relate how we began to discover that, I need to fill you in on the developments in my glittering career. For once, just once, it really was beginning to glitter.

      I had joined ITN in the summer of 1972 in the same lowly capacity as at the BBC, only this time I managed to get the weather forecast and football results mostly right. I was soon promoted from junior scriptwriter to chief sub-editor, but my heart lay in reporting. More than anything else I wanted to be a reporter, to travel the world reporting for News at Ten, to be a ‘fireman’, to use the journalistic term—to go into work in the morning not knowing where in the world I would be that evening. After three years ITN announced it had a vacancy for a reporter, and would accept external as well as internal applications. I was pretty sure I stood no chance, but I also knew if I didn’t put in for it, I could kiss my ambitions goodbye. I applied. I did a camera test. I read yesterday’s news bulletin. I got the job.

      When I left ITN 30 or so years later, my colleagues made a leaving video for me. They unearthed that camera test. A very young me, long hair halfway down to my shoulders, sideburns almost down to my chin, tinted glasses that went automatically darker under the studio lights, wide lapels. Very 1970s, very self-conscious, very gauche. No wonder it was years before Bonnie deigned to afford me a second glance.

      The reporting went well, because I loved doing it. Do a job you love, and it’s hard to mess it up. ‘Suchet delivers,’ said the senior foreign desk editor. I did indeed travel the world. I covered the Iran revolution, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. I was sent on an impossible mission to the teeming city of Algiers to find an Arab terrorist wanted for masterminding the Munich Olympics massacre: I found him and got an exclusive interview. One boring Sunday afternoon I sat at the reporters’ desk, twiddling my thumbs; three hours later I was on a chartered executive jet, flying to Spain to cover a hostage crisis. I attended the last Rhodesian Independence Ball before the country became Zimbabwe. In the late 1970s I came to know Belfast and Derry nearly as well as I knew London. My passport and contact lens solution were always in my briefcase.

      Then the plum came up, the most important and prestigious position open to an ITN reporter: US correspondent, based in Washington; ITN’s only overseas posting. Back in 1973, as a junior scriptwriter, I had been sent to Washington to act as runner for the then US correspondent, as President Nixon became engulfed in the Watergate scandal. It was my first trip to the United States, and from the day I entered the ITN office, I coveted the job of US correspondent. It was not only an unrealistic ambition, it was an impossible one. No mere scriptwriter had ever become a reporter at ITN, let alone US correspondent. Well, I had achieved the first part of that impossible dream, and now the ultimate prize was open.

      I applied for it, and got it. The then editor of ITN, David Nicholas, wrote me a letter telling me the job was mine, and expressing his assurance that I would bring the same distinction to it that I had shown as a general news reporter.

      Of course I would. I had wanted this job for the best part of a decade. I had achieved the impossible. Now I would really show what I was capable of. Well, I certainly did that. I proceeded to make such a hash of it that it almost brought my career to a total halt. Doesn’t that have a rather familiar ring to it?

      Yes, yours truly, ace reporter and superstar John Suchet, was about to prove, once again, how when offered his dream on a plate, he repaid his employers’ faith in him by messing it up. Big time. I had brought my career at Reuters to a halt with the decision to resign rather than take the job as bureau chief in Brazzaville. It was at Moya’s urging, but ultimately it was my decision. After that I almost got myself sacked by the BBC because my work was sloppy and careless, my attitude arrogant. But I came to my senses in time and just as the BBC was applauding my newfound commitment, I cut my losses and moved to ITN. Two damned close-run things had concentrated my mind, and when I began my career at ITN I was utterly determined not to fail. A third disaster would surely mean curtains for this fledgling journalistic career.

      I developed a sort of mantra. In my early years at ITN, I would walk through tube stations on my way to СКАЧАТЬ