PROLOGUE
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
EPILOGUE
THE MORNING GIFT. Copyright
© 1993 by Eva Ibbotson.
All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America.
No part of this hook may be
used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except
in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or review's. For
information.
address St. Martin's Press,
175 Fifth Avenue, New York, X.Y. 10010.
Library of Congress
Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Ibbotson, Eva. The morning
gift / Eva Ibbotson.
p. cm. ISBN 0-312-09338-1
Man-woman
relationships—Austria—Vienna—Fiction. 2. Vienna (Austria)—History—1918-
—Fiction. 1. Title.
PR6059.B3M67 1993
823',914—dc20 93-4114 C1P
First published in Great
Britain by Random Century Group.
First U.S. Edition: August
1993 10 987654 3 2 1
The Morning Gift
Vienna has always been a
city of myths. Before the First World War there was the ancient Kaiser, Franz
Joseph, who slept on an iron bed, never opened a book, and ritually washed the
feet of twelve old gentlemen on Maundy Thursday.
'Is nothing to be spared
me?' the Emperor had asked -and indeed not very much was. His wandering,
neurotic wife was stabbed to death by a mad anarchist on the shores of Lake
Geneva; his son, the Crown Prince Rudolf, shot himself and (after a larger
interval than was suitable) his mistress, in the hunting lodge at Mayerling.
Tragic events, all, but the very stuff of legend and excellent for the tourist
trade.
This was the Vienna from
which thirteen nationalities were governed; the city of parades and pageants
where the world's most dashing soldiers in blue and white and silver could be
seen each night crowding the standing parterre at the opera, for every serving
officer had the right to hear music free. The Vienna of the Lippizaners, the city's
darlings, stabled in an arcaded palace, who turned the death-dealing movements
of war into an equine ballet and were followed by solemn men with golden
shovels who scooped their noble droppings from the perfectly raked sand.
The carnage and wretchedness
of the Great War brought this era to an end. Yet somehow the city survived the
death of Franz Joseph, the abdication of his nephew, Austria's crashing defeat,
the loss of her empire. And new myths, now, were assembled for the visitors.
Professor Freud, on good days, could be pointed out drinking beer on the
terrace of the Cafe Landtmann. Arnold Schonberg, the inventor of atonal music,
gave concerts which might not be comprehensible but were obviously important,
and while no one knew exactly what logical positivism was, it was understood
that the philosophers who were inventing it were bringing acclaim to the city.
Leonie Berger's family had
lived in Vienna for a hundred years and her myths were her own.
'Personally I never meet
Professor Freud in the Landtmann,' she said to an enquiring visitor. 'All I
ever meet in the Landtmann is my Cousin Fritzi with those spoilt children of
hers running between the tables.'
Her father, descended from
prosperous Moravian wool merchants, owned a big department store in the
Mariahilferstrasse, but Leonie Berger had married into the intelligentsia. Kurt
Berger was already in his thirties, a lecturer at the university, when he
crossed the Stephansplatz and heard, from underneath a multitude of hungry
pigeons, the cries of a desperate young girl. Beating back the predatory birds,
he discovered a scratched and very pretty blonde who threw herself weeping into
his arms.
'I wanted to be like St
Francis of Assisi,' wailed Leonie, who had bought six whole packets of corn
from the old man who sold pigeon food.
Kurt Berger had not
expected to marry, but he married now, and could blame no one but himself when
he discovered that Leonie, so to speak, would never proffer one bag of corn
where six would do.
As for Leonie, she adored
her husband, who in turn became Professor of Vertebrate Zoology, a Director of
the Natural History Museum and Adviser to the Government. She orchestrated his
day with the precision of a Toscanini, herself handing him his briefcase and
silver-handled umbrella as he left at eight, serving lunch within five minutes
of his return, stilling the servants to silence while he took his afternoon
nap. The amount of starch in his collars, the movements of his intestine, were
known to Leonie within millimetres; she guarded him from importunate students
and carried his favourite mineral water to their box at the opera in a silver
flask. None of which prevented her from also attending to the ailments,
birthdays and love affairs of innumerable relatives whom she entertained, visited
and succoured, often more than once a day.
The Bergers lived in the
Inner City, on the first floor of a massive apartment house built round a
courtyard with a chestnut tree. The Professor's aged mother was hived off in
two of the twelve rooms; his unmarried sister, Hilda, an anthropologist who
specialized in the kinship systems of the Mi-Mi in Bechuanaland, had her own
suite. Leonie's Uncle Mishak, a small balding man with a romantic past, lived
in the mezzanine. But, of course, they wouldn't have been truly Viennese if
they hadn't, on the last day of the university term, departed for the
mountains. For the Crownlands of the old Habsburg Empire were left to the
Austrians: the Tyrol, Carinthia, Styria… and the rain-washed Salzkammergut
where, by a deep green lake called the Grundlsee, the Bergers owned a wooden
house.
The preparations for the
"simple life" they lived there involved Leonie in weeks of planning.
Hampers were brought up from the basement and filled with crockery and china,
with feather beds and linen. City suits were laid up in mothballs; dirndls were
washed, loden coats and alpen hats brought out of storage and the maids sent on
by train.
And there, on a verandah
overlooking the water, the Professor continued to write his book on The
Evolution of the Fossil Brain, Hilda composed her papers for the
Anthropological Society and Uncle Mishak fished. In the afternoons, however,
pleasure erupted. Accompanied by friends, relatives and students who came to
stay, they took excursions in rowing boats to uncomfortable islands or walked
ecstatically across flower-filled meadows exclaiming "Alpenrosen!"
or "Enzian!" Since a number of doctors, lawyers, theologians
and string quartets also had houses along the lake, some extremely high-powered
conversations often grew up between one clump of flowers and the next. Midges
bit people, splinters from the bathing huts lodged in their feet, bilberries
stained their teeth - and each evening they gathered to watch the sun set
behind the snow-capped mountains and shriek "Wunderbar!"
Then on the last day of
August the dirndls were put away, the hampers packed - and everyone returned to
Vienna for the first night of the Burg Theatre, the opening of the Opera, and
the start of the university term.
It was into this fortunate
family that - when the Professor was already approaching his forties and his
wife had given up hope of a child - there was born a daughter whom they called
Ruth.
Delivered by Vienna's most
eminent obstetrician, her arrival brought a posse of Herr Doktors, Hen
Professors, University Chancellors and Nobel Laureates to admire the baby,
poke at her head with scholarly fingers and, quite frequently, quote from
Goethe.
In spite of this roll call
of the intelligentsia, Leonie sent for her old nurse from the Vorarlberg, who
arrived with the wooden cradle that had been in the family for generations, and
the baby lay under the chestnut tree in the courtyard, lulled by the sweet and
foolish songs about roses and carnations and shepherds that country children
drink in with their mother's milk. And at first it seemed that Ruth might turn
into just such an Austrian Wiegenkind. Her hair, when it grew at last,
was the colour of sunlight; her button nose attracted freckles, she had a wide,
sweet smile. But no goose girl ever clasped the sides of her cot with such
fierce resolution, nor had such enquiring, life-devouring dark brown eyes.
'A milkmaid with the eyes
of Nefertiti,' said an eminent Egyptologist who came to dinner.
She adored talking, she
needed to know everything; she was an infant fixer convinced she could put the
world to rights.
'She shouldn't know such
words,' said Leonie's friends, shocked.
But she had to know words.
She had to know everything.
The Professor, a tall
grey-bearded and patriarchal figure accustomed to the adulation of his
students, nevertheless took her himself through the Natural History Museum
where he had his own rooms. At six she was already familiar with the travail
and complications that attend the reproductive act.
'Sex is a little bit sad,
isn't it?' said Ruth, holding her father's hand, surveying the bottled wind
spiders who bit off their partners' heads to make them mate faster. 'And the
poor octopus… having to hold on to a female for twenty-four hours to let the
eggs go down your tentacles.'
From her unworldly Aunt
Hilda, who was apt to depart for the university with her skirt on back to
front, Ruth learnt the value of tolerance.
'One must not judge other
cultures by the standards of one's own,' said Aunt Hilda, who was writing a
monograph on her beloved Mi-Mi - and Ruth quite quickly accepted the compulsion
of certain tribes to consume, ritually, their grandmothers.
The research assistants and
demonstrators in the university all knew her, as did the taxidermists and
preparators in the museum. At eight she was judged fit to help her father sort
the teeth of the fossil cave bears he had found in the Drachenhohle
caves and it was understood that when she grew up she would be his assistant,
type his books and accompany him on his field work.
Her little, bald-headed
Uncle Mishak, still grieving for the death of his wife, led her into a
different world. Mishak had spent twenty dutiful years in the personnel
department of his brother's department store, but he was a countryman at heart
and walked the city as he had walked the forests of Bohemia as a child. With
Mishak, Ruth was always feeding something: a duck in the Stadtpark, a squirrel…
or stroking something: a tired cab horse at the gates of the Prater, the stone
toes of the god Neptune on the fountain in Schonbrunn.
And, of course, there was
her mother, Leonie, endlessly throwing out her arms, hugging her, scolding her…
being unbearably hurt by an acid remark from a great-aunt, banishing the aunt
to outer darkness, being noisily reconciled to the same aunt with enormous
bunches of flowers… Carrying Ruth off to her grandfather's department store to
equip her with sailor suits, with buckled patent leather shoes, with pleated
silk dresses, then yelling at her when she came in from school.
'Why aren't you top in
English; you let that stupid Inge beat you,' she would cry - and then take Ruth
off for consolation to Demels to eat chocolate eclairs. 'Well, she has a nose
like an anteater so why shouldn't she be top in English,' Leonie would
conclude, but the next year she imported a Scottish governess to make sure that
no one spoke better English than her Ruth.
And so the child grew;
volatile, passionate and clever, recommending birth control for her
grandmother's cat, yet crying inconsolably when she was cast as an icicle
instead of the Snow Queen in the Christmas play at school.
'Doesn't she ever stop
talking?' Leonie's friends would ask - yet she was easily extinguished. A snub,
an unkind remark, silenced her instantly.
And something else… The
sound of music.
Ruth's need for music was
so much a part of her Viennese heritage that no one at first noticed how acute
it was. Ever since infancy it had been almost impossible to pull her away from
music-making and she had her own places, music-places, she called them, to
which she gravitated like a thirsty bullock to a water hole.
There was the ground-floor
window of the shabby old Hochschule fur Musik where the Ziller Quartet
rehearsed, and the concert hall by the fruit market - the Musikverein -where,
if the janitor had been kind enough to leave the door open, one could hear the
Philharmonia play. One blind fiddler of all the beggars that played in the
streets would halt her, and when she listened she seemed to turn pale with
concentration, as children do in sleep. Her parents were sympathetic, she had
piano lessons which she enjoyed, she passed her exams, but she had a need of
excellence which she herself could not provide.
So for a long time she had
listened with wide eyes to the stories about her Cousin Heini in Budapest.
Heini was a scant year
older than Ruth, and he was a boy in a fairy story. His mother, Leonie's
stepsister, had married a Hungarian journalist called Radek and Heini lived in
a place called the Hill of the Roses high above the Danube in a yellow villa
surrounded by apple trees. A Turkish pasha was buried in a tomb further down on
the slope of the hill; from Radek's balcony one could see the great river
curling away towards the Hungarian plains, the graceful bridges and the spires
and pinnacles of the Houses of Parliament like a palace in a dream. For in
Budapest, unlike Vienna, the Danube flows through the city's very heart.
But that wasn't all. When
he was three, Heini climbed onto his father's piano stool.
'It was like coming home,'
he was to tell reporters afterwards. At the age of six, he gave his first
recital in the hall where Franz Liszt had played. Two years later, a professor
at the Academy invited Bartok to hear him play and the great man nodded.
But in fairy stories there
is always grief. When Heini was eleven, his mother died and the golden Wunderkind
became almost an orphan, for his father, who edited a German language
newspaper, was always working. So it was decided that Heini should continue his
studies in Vienna and be prepared there for entrance to the Conservatoire. He
would lodge with his teacher, an eminent Professor of Piano Studies, but his
spare time would be spent with the Bergers.
Ruth never forgot the first
time she saw him. She had come in from school and was hanging up her satchel
when she heard the music. A slow piece, and sad, but underneath the sadness so
right, so… consoled.
Her father and aunt were
still at the university; her mother was in the kitchen conferring with the
cook. Drawn by the music, she walked slowly through the enfilade of rooms: the
dining room, the drawing room, the library - and opened the door of the study.
At first she saw only the
great lid of the Bechstein like a dark sail filling the room. Then she peered
round it - and saw the boy.
He had a thin face, black
curls which tumbled over his forehead and large grey eyes, and when he saw her,
his hands still moving over the keys, he smiled and said, 'Hello.'
She smiled too, awed at the
delight it gave her to hear this music in her own home, overwhelmed by the
authority, the excellence that came from him, young as he was. ,
'It's Mozart, isn't it?'
she said, sighing, for she knew already that there was everything in Mozart;
that if you stuck to him you couldn't go wrong. Two years earlier she had begun
to attend to him in her daydreams, keeping him alive with her cookery and care
long after his thirty-sixth year. 'Yes. The Adagio in B Minor.'
He finished playing and
looked at her and found her entirely pleasing. He liked her fair hair in its
old-fashioned heavy plait, her snub nose, the crisp white blouse and pleated
pinafore. Above all, he liked the admiration reflected in her eyes.
'I musn't disturb you,' she
said.
He shook his head. 'I don't
mind you being here if you're quiet,' he said.
And then he told her about
Mozart's starling. 'Mozart had a starling,' Heini said. 'He kept it in a cage
in the room where he worked and he didn't mind it singing. In fact he liked it
to be there and he used its song in the Finale of the G Major Piano Concerto.
Did you know that?' 'No, I didn't.'
He watched the thick plait
of hair swing to and fro as she shook her head.
Then: 'You can be my
starling,' Heini said. She nodded. It was an honour he was conferring; a great
gift - she understood that at once.
'I would like that,' said
Ruth.
And from then on, whenever
she could, she settled quietly in the room where he practised, sometimes with
her homework or a book, mostly just listening. She turned the pages for him
when he played from a score, her small, square-tipped fingers touching the page
as lightly as a moth. She waited for him after lessons, she took his tattered
Beethoven sonatas to the bookbinder to be rebound.
'She has become a
handmaiden,' said Leonie, not entirely pleased.
But Ruth did not neglect
her school work or her friends, somehow she found time for everything.
'I want to live
like music sounds,' she had said once, coming out of a concert at the
Musikverein.
Serving Heini, loving him,
she drew closer to this idea.
So Heini stayed in Vienna
and that summer, preceded by a hired piano, he joined the Bergers on the
Grundlsee.
And that summer, too, the
summer of 1930, a young Englishman named Quinton Somerville came to work with
the Professor.
Quin was twenty-three years
old at the time of his visit, but he had already spent eighteen months in
Tubingen working under the famous palaeontologist Freiherr von Huene, and
arrived in Vienna not only with a thorough knowledge of German, but
with a formidable reputation for so young a man. While still at Cambridge, Quin
had managed to get himself on to an expedition to the giant reptile beds of
Tendaguru in Tanganyika. The following year he travelled to the Cape where the
skull of Australopithecus africanus had turned up in a lime quarry,
setting off a raging controversy about the origin of man, and came under the
influence of the brilliant and eccentric Robert Broom who hunted fossils in the
nude and fostered Quin's interest in the hominids. To avoid guesswork and
flamboyance when Missing Link expeditions were fighting each other for the
'dragon bones' of China, and scientists came to blows about the authenticity of
Piltdown Man, was difficult, but Quin's doctoral thesis on the mammalian bone
accumulations of the Olduvai Gorge was both erudite and sober.
Professor Berger met him at
a conference and invited him to Vienna to give the Annual Lecture to the
Palaeontological Society, suggesting he might stay on for a few weeks to help
edit a new symposium of Vertebrate Zoology.
Quin came; the lecture was
a success. He had just returned from Kenya and spoke with unashamed enthusiasm
about the excitement of the excavations and the beauty of the land. It had been
his intention to book into a hotel, but the Professor wouldn't hear of it.
'Of course you will stay
with us,' he said, and took him to the Felsengasse where his family found
themselves surprised. For it was well known that Englishmen, especially those
who explored things and hung on the ends of ropes, were tall and fair with
piercing blue eyes and braying, confident voices which disposed of natives and
underlings. Or at best, if very well bred, they looked bleached and chiselled,
like crusaders on a tomb, with long, stately noses and lean hands folded over
their swords.
In all these matters, Quin
was a disappointment. His face looked as though it needed ironing; the high
forehead crumpled at a moment's notice into alarming furrows, his nose looked
slightly broken, and the amused, enquiring eyes were a deep, almost a
Mediterranean brown. Only the shapely hands with which he filled, poked at and
tapped (but seldom lit) an ancient pipe, would have passed muster on a tomb.
'But his shoes are
handmade,' declared Miss Kenmore, Ruth's Scottish governess. 'So he is
definitely upper class.'
Leonie was inclined to
believe this on account of the taxis. Quin, accompanying them to the opera or
the theatre, had only to raise the fingers of one hand as they emerged for a
taxi to perform a U-turn in the Ringstrasse and come to a halt in front of him.
'And there is the
shooting,' said Ruth, for the Englishman, at the funfair in the Prater, had won
a cut-glass bowl, a goldfish and an outsize blue rabbit and been requested by
the irate owner of the booth to take his custom elsewhere. And what could that
mean except a background of jolly shooting parties on breezy moors, disposing
of pheasants, partridges and grouse?
The reality was different.
Quin's mother died when he was born; his father, attached to the Embassy in
Switzerland, volunteered in 1916 and was killed on the Somme. Sent back to the
family home in Northumberland, Quin found himself in a house where everyone was
old. An irascible, domineering grandfather - the terrifying "Basher"
Somerville - presided over Quin's first years at Bowmont and the spinster aunt
who came to take over after his death hardly seemed younger.
But if there was no one to
show the orphaned boy affection, he was given something he knew how to value:
his freedom.
'Let the boy run wild,' the
family doctor sensibly advised when Quin, soon after his arrival, developed a
prolonged and only partly explained fever. 'There's time for school later; he's
bright enough.'
So Quin had his reprieve
from the monotony of British boarding schools and furnished for himself a
secret and entirely satisfactory world. Most children, especially only ones,
have an invisible playmate who accompanies them through the day. Quin's, from
the age of eight, was not an imaginary brother or understanding boy of his own
age; it was a dinosaur. The creature - a brontosaurus whom he called Harry -
stretched sixty feet; his head, when he put it through the nursery window,
filled the room and its heartwarming smile was without menace for he ate only
the bamboo in the shrubbery or the moist plants in the coppice which edged the
lawn.
An article in The Boy's
Own Paper had introduced him to Harry; Conan Doyle's The Lost World
plunged him deeper into the fabled world of pre-history. He became the leader
of the dinosaurs, a Mowgli of the Jurassic swamps who learnt to tame even the
ghastly tyrannosaurus rex on whose back he rode.
'I must say, you don't have
to spend time amusing him,' said his nurse, not realizing that nothing could
compete with the dramas Quin enacted in his head. From the dinosaurs, the boy
went backwards and forwards in time. He read of the geological layers of the
earth, of lobe-finned fishes and the mammals of the Pleistocene. By the time he
was eleven, he was risking his life almost daily, scrambling down cliffs and
quarries, searching for fossils embedded in the rock and had started a
collection in the old stables grandly labelled 'The Somerville Museum of
Natural History'. As he grew older and Harry became dimmer in his mind, the
museum was expanded to take in the marine specimens he found everywhere. For
Quin's home looked out over the North Sea to the curving, sand-fringed sweep of
BowmontBay whose rock pools were his nursery; the creatures inside them more
interesting than any toy.
Quin would have been
surprised if anyone had told him he was 'doing science' or becoming educated,
but later, at Cambridge, he was amused by the solemnity with which they taught
facts which he had learnt before his eleventh year, and the elaborate
preparations for field trips to places he had clambered up and down in gym
shoes.
He got a First in the
Natural History Tripos with embarrassing ease, but his unfettered childhood
made him reluctant to accept a permanent academic post. Financially independent
since his eighteenth birthday, he had managed to spend the greater part of his
time on expeditions to inaccessible parts of the world, yet now he fell in love
with Vienna.
Not with the Vienna of
operettas and cream cakes, though he took both politely from the hands of his
hostess, but with the austere, arcaded courts of the university with its busts
of old alumni resounding like a great roll call of the achievements of science.
Doppler was there in stone, and Semmelweis who rid women of puerperal fever,
and Billroth, the surgeon who befriended Brahms. In the library of the Hofburg,
Quin spun the great gold-mounted globe which the Emperor Ferdinand had
consulted to send his explorers forth. And in the Natural History Museum, he
found a tiny, ugly, pot-bellied figurine, the Venus of Willendorf, priceless
and guarded, made by man at the time when mammoths and sabre-toothed tigers
still roamed the land.
When the university term
ended, the Bergers begged him to join them on the Grundlsee.
'It's so beautiful,'
said Ruth. 'The rain and the salamanders - and if you lie on your stomach on
the landing stage you can see hundreds of little fishes between the boards like
in a frame.'
He was due back in
Cambridge, but he came and proved an excellent bilberry picker, an enthusiastic
oarsman and a man able to shriek "Wunderbar!" with the best
of them. If they enjoyed his company, he, in turn, took back treasured memories
of Austrian country life: Tante Hilda in striped bathing bloomers performing a
violent breaststroke without moving from the spot… The Professor's ancient
mother running her wheelchair at a trespassing goat… And Klaus
Biberstein, the second
violin of the Ziller quartet, who loved Leonie but had a weak digestion,
creeping out at midnight to feed his secreted Knödel to the fish.
Of Ruth he saw relatively
little, for in one of those wooden huts so beloved of Austrian musicians, her
Cousin Heini practised the piano and she was busy carrying jugs of milk or
plates of biscuits to and fro. Once he found her sitting by the shore with a
somewhat surprising collection of books. Krafft-Ebing's Sexual Pathology,
Little Women and a cowboy story with a lurid cover called Jake's Last
Stand.
It was the Krafft-Ebing she
was perusing with a furrowed brow.
'Goodness!' he said. 'Are
you allowed to read that?'
She nodded. 'I'm allowed to
read everything,' she said. 'Only I have to eat everything too, even semolina.'
But on the night before he
had to leave, Miss Kenmore could no longer be gainsaid and Quin was informed
that Ruth would recite Keats' "Ode to a Nightingale" for him after
supper.
'She has it entirely by
heart, Dr Somerville,' she said -and Quin, repressing a sigh, joined the family
in the drawing room with its long windows open to the lake.
Ruth's fair hair had been
brushed out; she wore a velvet ribbon - clearly the occasion was important -
yet at first Quin was compelled to look at the floor and school his expression,
for she spoke the famous lines in the unmistakable accent of Aberdeen.
Only when she came to the
penultimate verse, to the part of the poem that belonged personally to her, for
it was about her namesake, did he lift his head, caught by something in her
voice.
Perhaps the self-same song
that found a path Through the sad heart of Ruth, when, sick for home, She stood
in tears among the alien corn…
Hackneyed lines, lines he
had grown weary of at school, they still had power to stir him.
Yet no one there, not one
of the people who loved her, not
Quin, not Ruth herself,
enjoying the poem's sadness, were touched by a single glimmer of premonition.
No hairs lifted on the nape of any necks; no ghosts walked over the quiet
waters of the lake. That this protected, much-loved child should ever have to
leave her native land, was unimaginable. The next day, Quin left for England.
The family all came to see him off and begged him to come back soon - but it
was eight years before he returned to Vienna and then he came to a different
city and a different world.
On the day that Hitler
marched into Vienna, Professor Somerville was leading his not noticeably
grateful expedition down a defile so narrow that overshadowing precipices
blocked out all but a strip of the clear blue sky of Central Asia.
'You can't possibly get the
animals down this way,' a Belgian geologist he had been compelled to take along
had complained.
But Quin had just said
vaguely that he thought it might be all right, by which he meant that if
everyone nearly killed themselves and did exactly what he told them, there was
a chance - and now, sure enough, the chasm widened, they passed the first trees
growing wherever roots could take hold, and made their way through forests of
pine and cedar to reach, at last, the bottom of the valley.
'We'll camp here,' said
Quin, pointing to a place where the untroubled river, idling past, dragged at
the overhanging willows, and drifts of orchids and asphodels studded the grass.
Later, when the mules were
grazing and the smoke from the fire curled upwards in the still air, he leant
back against a tree and took out the battered pipe which many women had tried
to replace. He was thirty years old now, lines were etched into the
crumpled-looking forehead and the sides of the mouth, and the dark eyes could
look hard, but at this moment he was entirely happy. For he had been right. In
spite of the gloomy prognostications of the Belgian whose spectacles had been
stepped on by a yak; in spite of the assurances of his porters that it was
impossible to reach the remoter valleys of the Siwalik Range in the spring, he
had found as rich a collection of Miocene fossils as anyone could hope for.
Wrapped now in woodwool and canvas, more valuable than any golden treasure from
a tomb, was the unmistakable evidence of Ramapithecus, one of the
earliest ancestors of man.
There were three weeks of
travelling still along the river valley before they could load their specimens
onto lorries for the drive down to Simla, but the problems now would be social:
the drinking of terrible tea with the villagers, bedbugs, hospitality…
A lammergeier hung like a
nail in the sky. The bells of browsing cattle came from a distant meadow, and
the wail of a flute.
Quin closed his eyes.
News of the outside world
when it came at last was brought by an Indian army officer in the rest house
above Simla and was delivered in the order of importance. Oxford had won the
Boat Race, an outsider named Battleship had romped home at Aintree.
'Oh, and Hitler's annexed
Austria. Marched into Vienna without a shot being fired.'
'Will you still go?' asked
Milner, his research assistant and a trusted friend. 'I don't know.'
'I suppose it's a terrific
honour. I mean, they don't give away degrees in a place like that.'
Quin shrugged. It was not
the first honorary degree he had been awarded. Persuaded three years ago to take
up a professorship in London, he still managed to pursue his investigations in
the more exotic corners of the world, and he had been lucky with his finds.
'Berger arranged it. He's
Dean of the Science Faculty now. If it wasn't for him I doubt if I'd go; I've
no desire to go anywhere near the Nazis. But I owe him a lot and his family
were very good to me. I stayed with them one summer.' He smiled, remembering
the excitable, affectionate Bergers, the massive meals in the Viennese
apartment, and the wooden house on the Grundlsee. There'd been an
accident-prone anthropologist whose monograph on the Mi-Mi had fallen out of a
rowing boat, and a pigtailed little girl with a biblical name he couldn't now
recall. Rachel… ? Hannah… ?
'I'll go,' he decided. 'If
I jump ship at Izmir I can connect with the Orient Express. It won't delay me
more than a couple of days. I know I can trust you to see the stuff through the
customs, but if there's any trouble I'll sort it out when I come.'
The pigeons were still
there, wheeling as if to music in this absurdly music-minded city; the cobbles,
the spire of St Stephan's glimpsed continually from the narrow streets as his
taxi took him from the station. The smell of vanilla too, as he pulled down the
windows, and the lilacs and laburnums in the park.
But the swastika banners
now hung from the windows, relics of the city's welcome to the Führer, groups
of soldiers with the insignia of the SS stood together on street corners - and
when the taxi turned into a narrow lane, he saw the hideous daubings on the
doors of Jewish shops, the broken windows.
In Sacher's Hotel he found
that his booking had been honoured. The welcome was friendly, Kaiser Franz
Joseph in his mutton chop whiskers still hung in the foyer, not yet replaced by
the Führer's banal face. But in the bar three German officers with their
peroxided girlfriends were talking loudly in Berlin accents. Even if there had
been time to have a drink, Quin would not have joined them. In fact there was
no time at all for the unthinkable had happened and the fabled Orient Express
had developed engine trouble. Changing quickly into a dark suit, he hurried to
the university. Berger's secretary had written to him before he left England,
explaining that robes would be hired for him, and all degree ceremonies were
much the same. It was only necessary to follow the person in front in the
manner of penguins.
All the same, it was even
later than he had realized. Groups of men in scarlet and gold, in black and
purple, with hoods bound in ermine or tasselled caps, stood on the steps;
streams of proud relatives in their best clothes moved through the imposing
doors.
'Ah, Professor Somerville,
you are expected, everything is ready.' The Registrar's secretary greeted him
with relief.
'I'll take you straight to
the robing room. The Dean was hoping to welcome you before the ceremony, but
he's already in the hall so he'll meet you at the reception.'
'I'm looking forward to
seeing him.'
Quin's gown of scarlet
silk, lined with palatine purple, was laid out on a table beside a card bearing
his name. The velvet hat was too big, but he pushed it onto the back of his
head and went out to join the other candidates waiting in the anteroom.
The organist launched into
a Bach passacaglia, and between a fat lady professor from the Argentine and
what seemed to be the oldest entomologist in the world, Quin marched down the
aisle of the Great Hall towards the Chancellor's throne.
As he'd expected in this
city, where even the cab horses were caparisoned, the ceremony proceeded with
the maximum of pomp. Men rose, doffed their caps, bowed to each other, sat down
again. The organ pealed. Long-dead alumni in golden frames stared down from the
wall.
Seated to the right of the
dais, Quin, looking for Berger in the row of academics opposite, was impeded by
the hat of the lady professor from the Argentine who seemed to be wearing an
outsize academic soup tureen.
One by one, the graduates
to be honoured were called out to have their achievements proclaimed in Latin,
to be hit on the shoulder by a silver sausage containing the charter bestowed
on the university by the Emperor Maximilian, and receive a parchment scroll.
Quin, helping the entomologist from his chair, wondered whether the old
gentleman would survive being hit by anything at all, but he did. The fat lady
professor went next. His view now unimpeded, Quin searched the gaudily robed
row of senior university members but could see no sign of Berger. It was eight
years since they had met, but surely he would recognize that wise, dark face?
His turn now.
'It has been decided to
confer the degree of Doctor of Science, Honoris Causa on Quinton Alexander St
John Somerville. The public orator will now introduce Professor Somerville to
you.'
Quin rose and went to stand
facing the Chancellor, one of whose weak blue eyes was partly obscured by the
golden tassel hanging from his cap. While the fulsome platitudes in praise of
his achievements rolled out, Quin grew increasingly uneasy - and suddenly what
had seemed to be an archaic but not undignified attempt to maintain the
traditions of the past, became a travesty, an absurd charade mouthed by
puppets.
The oration ceased, leaving
him the youngest professor in the University of Thameside, Fellow of the Royal
Society, Gold Medallist of the Geographical Association and the Sherlock Holmes
of pre-history whose inspired investigations had unlocked the secrets of the
past.
Quin scowled and climbed
the dais. The Chancellor raised his sausage - and recoiled.
'The chap looked as though
he wanted to kill me,' he complained afterwards.
Quin mastered himself, took
the scroll, returned to his place.
And now at last it was over
and he could ask the question that had haunted him throughout the tedious
ceremony.
'Where is Professor
Berger?'
He had spoken to the
Registrar whose pale eyes slid away from him.
'Professor Berger is no
longer with us. But the new Dean, Professor Schlesinger, is waiting to greet
you.'
'I, however, am not waiting
to greet him. Where is Professor Berger? Please answer my question.'
The Registrar shuffled his
feet. 'He has been relieved of his post.'
'Why?'
'The Nuremberg Laws were
implemented immediately after the Anschluss. Nobody who is not racially pure
can hold high office.' He took a step backwards. 'It's not my fault, I'm only
-'
'Where is Berger? Is he
still in Vienna?'
The Registrar shook his
head. 'I don't know. Many Jews have been trying to emigrate.'
'Find me his last address.'
'Yes, Professor, certainly,
after the reception.' 'No, not after the reception,' said Quin. 'Now. [
He remembered the street
but not, at first, the house. Then a particularly well-nourished pair of
caryatids sent him through an archway and into the courtyard. The concierge was
not in her box; no one impeded him as he made his way up the wide marble staircase
to the first floor.
Professor Berger's brass
plate was still screwed onto the door, but the door itself, surprisingly, was
ajar. He pushed it open. Here in the old days he had been met by a maid in a
black apron, but there was no one there. The Professor's umbrella and walking
sticks were still in the stand, his hat hung on its hook. Making his way down
the passage with its thick Turkey carpet, he knocked on the door of the study
and opened it. He had spent many hours here working on the symposium, awed by
Berger's scholarship and the generosity with which he shared his ideas. The
Professor's books lined the wall, the Remington, under its black cover, stood
on the desk.
Yet the silence was eerie.
He thought of the Marie Celeste, the boat found abandoned in mid-ocean
with the cups still on the table, the uneaten food. A double door led from the
study into the dining room with its massive table and tall leather-backed
chairs. The Meissen plates were still on the dresser; a cup the Professor had
won for fencing stood on the sideboard. Increasingly puzzled, he moved on into
the drawing room. The paintings of alpine landscapes hung undisturbed on the
walls; the Professor's war medals lay in their cases under glass. A palm tree
in a brass pot had been watered - yet he had never sensed such desolation, such
emptiness.
No, not emptiness after
all. In a distant room someone was playing the piano. Hardly playing, though,
for one phrase was repeated again and again: an incongruous, chirruping phrase
like the song of a bird.
He was in the rooms facing
the courtyard now, opening more doors. And now a last door, and the source of
the sound. A girl, her head cradled in the curve of her arm as it lay on the
piano, the other hand touching the keys. In the moment before she noticed him,
he saw how weary she was, how bereft of hope. Then she lifted her head and as
she looked at him he remembered, suddenly, her name.
'You must be Professor
Berger's daughter. You must be Ruth.'
It was a certain triumph,
his recognition, for much had happened to the pretty, prattling child with her
flaxen pigtail. A kind of Rapunzel situation had developed with her hair; still
blonde, but loose to below her shoulders and shot through with colours that
were hard to name… ash… bronze… a sort of greenish gold that was almost khaki.
Inside its mass as she waited, perhaps, for a prince to ascend its tresses, was
a pale triangular face with dark smudged eyes.
'What were you playing?' he
asked. She looked down at the keys. 'It's the theme of the last movement of the
G Major Piano Concerto by Mozart. It's supposed to be based on the song of a
starling that - ' Her voice broke and she bent her head to vanish, for a
moment, into the privacy accorded by her tumbled hair. But now she, too,
recalled the past. 'Of course! You're Professor Somer-ville! I remember when
you came before and we were so disappointed. You were supposed to have sunburnt
knees and a voice like Richard the Lionheart's.' 'What sort of a voice did he
have?' 'Oh, loud! Horses used to kneel at his shout, didn't you know?'
Quin shook his head, but he
was amazed, for she had pushed back her hair and smiled at him - and in an
instant the beleaguered captive in her tower vanished and it was summertime on
an alp with cows. It was not the eyes one noticed now, but the snub nose, the
wide mouth, the freckles. 'Of course, it was the degree ceremony today, wasn't
it? My father tried to contact you while he was still allowed to telephone. Did
it go all right?'
Quin shrugged. 'Where is
your father?'
'He's in England. In
London. My mother too, and my aunt… and Uncle Mishak. They went a week ago. And
Heini as well - he's gone to Budapest to pick up his visa and then he's joining
them.'
'And left you behind?'
It didn't seem possible. He
remembered her as, if anything, over-protected, too much indulged.
She shook her head. 'They
sent me ahead. But it all went wrong.' It was over now, the pastoral time on
the alp with cows. Her eyes filled with tears; one hand clenched itself into a
fist which she pressed against her cheek as though to hold in grief. 'It went
completely wrong. And I'm trapped here now. There is nobody left.'
'Tell me,' said Quin. 'I've
plenty of time. Tell me exactly what happened. And come away from the piano so
that we can be comfortable.' For he had understood that the piano was some
special source of grief.
'No.' She was still the
good university child who knew the ritual. 'It's the Chancellor's Banquet.
There's always a dinner after the honorary degrees. You'll be expected.'
'You can't imagine I would
dine with those people,' he said quietly. 'Now start.'
Her father had begun even
before the Anschluss, trying to get her a student visa.
'We still hoped the
Austrians would stand out against Hitler, but he'd always wanted me to study in
England - that's why he sent me to the English School here after my governess
left. I was in my second year, reading Natural Sciences. I was going to help my
father till Heini and I could…'
'Who's Heini?'
'He's my cousin. Well, sort
of… He and I…'
Sentences about Heini did
not seem to be the kind she finished. But Quin now had recalled the prodigy in
his wooden hut. He could attach no face to Heini, only the endless sound of the
piano, but now there came the image of the pigtailed child carrying wild
strawberries in her cupped hands to where he played. It had lasted then, her
love for the gifted boy.
'Goon.'
'It wasn't too difficult.
If you don't want to emigrate for good, the British don't mind. I didn't even
have to have a J on my passport because I'm only partly Jewish. The Quakers
were marvellous. They arranged for me to go on a student transport from Graz.'
As soon as her departure
was settled, her parents had sent her to Graz to wait.
'They wanted me out of the
way because I'd kicked a Brown Shirt and -'
'Good God!'
She made a gesture of
dismissal. 'Anyway, after I went, my father was suddenly arrested. They took
him to that hell hole by the Danube Canal - the Gestapo House. He was held
there for days and no one told me. Then they released him and told him he had to
leave the country within a week with his family or be taken to a camp. They
were allowed to take just one suitcase each and ten German marks - you can't
live for a day on that, but of course nothing mattered as long as they could
get away. I'd gone ahead on the student transport two days before.'
'So what happened?'
'We got to the border and
then a whole lot of SS people got on. They were looking for our Certificates of
Harmless-ness.'
'Your what?"
She passed a hand over her
forehead and he thought he'd never seen anyone so young look so tired. 'It's
some new piece of paper - they invent them all the time. It's to show you
haven't been politically active. They don't want to send people abroad who are
going to make trouble for the regime.'
'And you hadn't got one?'
She shook her head. 'At the
university there was a boy who'd been to Russia. I'd read Dostoevsky, of
course, and I thought one should be on the side of the proletariat and go to
Siberia with people in exile and all that. I'd always worried because we seemed
to have so much. I mean, it can't be right that some people should have
everything and others nothing.'
'No, it can't be right. But
what to do about it isn't always simple.'
'Anyway, I didn't become a
Communist like he was because they kept on calling each other
"Comrade" and then quarrelling, but I joined the Social Democrats and
we marched in processions and had fights with the Brown Shirts. It seems
childish now - we thought we were so fierce. And, of course, all the time the
authorities had me down as a dangerous radical!'
'So by the time they took
you off the student train your parents had gone?'
'No, they hadn't actually.
I phoned a friend of theirs because they'd cut off our telephone and she said
they were off the next day. I knew that if they realized I was still in Austria
they wouldn't go, so I went to stay with our old cook in Grinzing till they
left.'
'That was brave,' said Quin
quietly.
She shrugged. 'It was very
difficult, I must say. The most difficult thing I've ever done.'
'And with luck the most
difficult thing you'll ever have to do.'
She shook her head. 'I
think not.' The words were almost inaudible. 'I think that for my people, night
has come.'
'Nonsense.' He spoke with
deliberate briskness. 'There'll be a way of helping you. I'll go to the British
Consulate in the morning.'
Again that shake of the
head, sending the blonde, absurdly abundant hair swinging on her shoulders.
'I've tried everything. There's a man called Eichmann who runs something called
the Department of Emigration. He's supposed to help people to leave, but what
he really does is make sure they're stripped of everything they own. You don't
know what it's like - people weeping and shouting…'
He had risen and begun to
walk up and down, needing to think. 'What a huge place this is!'
She nodded. 'Twelve rooms.
My grandmother had two of them, but she died last year. When I was small I used
to ride round and round the corridors on my tricycle.' She followed him.
'That's my father in the uniform of the 14th Uhlans.
He was decorated twice for
bravery — he couldn't believe that none of that counted.'
'Is he completely Jewish?'
'By birth, yes. I don't
think he ever thought about it. His religion was to do with people… with
everyone trying to make themselves into the best sort of person they could be.
He believed in a God that belonged to everyone… you had to guard the spark that
was in you and make it into a flame. And my mother was brought up as a Catholic
so it's doubly hard for her. She's only half-Jewish, or maybe a quarter, we're
not quite sure. She had a very Aryan mother - a sort of goat-herding lady.'
'So that makes you… what?
Three-quarters? Five-eighths? It's hard to believe.'
She smiled. 'My snub nose,
you mean - and being fair? My grandmother came from the country - the
goat-herding one. My grandfather really found her tending goats — well, almost.
She came from a farm. We used to laugh at her a bit and call her Heidi; she
never opened a book in her life, but I'm grateful to her now because I look
like her and no one ever molests me.'
They had reached a
glassed-in verandah overlooking the courtyard. In the corner beside an oleander
in a tub, was a painted cradle adorned with roses and lilies. Over the
headboard, painstakingly scrolled, were the words Ruthie's cradle.
Quin set it rocking with
the toe of his shoe. Beside him, Ruth had fallen silent. Down in the courtyard
a single tree -a chestnut in full blossom - stretched out its arms. A swing was
suspended from one branch; on a washing line strung between two posts hung a
row of red-and-white checked tea towels, and a baby's shirt no bigger than a
handkerchief.
'I used to play down
there,' she said. 'All through my childhood. It seemed so safe to me. The
safest place in the world.'
He had made no sound, yet
something made her turn to look at him. She had thought of the Englishman as
kind and civilized. Now the crumpled face looked devilish: the mouth twisted,
the skin stretched tight over the bones. It lasted only a moment, his
transformation into someone to fear. Then he laid a hand lightly on her arm.
'You'll see. There will be
something we can do.'
Ruth had not exaggerated.
There were no words to describe the chaos and despair the Anschluss had caused.
He had arrived early at the British Consulate but already there were queues.
People begged for pieces of paper - visas, passports, permits - as the starving
begged for bread.
'I'm sorry, sir, I can't do
anything about this,' said the clerk, looking at Ruth's documents. 'It's not
the British refusing to let her in, it's the Austrians refusing to let her out.
She'd have to re-apply for emigration and that could take months or years. The
quota's full, as you know.'
'If I was willing to
sponsor her - to guarantee she wouldn't be a burden on the state? Or get her a
domestic work permit? My family would offer her employment.'
'You'd have to do that from
England, sir. Everything's at sixes and sevens here with Austria no longer
being an independent state. The Embassy's going to close and they're sending
staff home all the time.'
'Look, the girl's twenty
years old. Her entire family's in England - she's alone in the world.'
'I'm sorry, sir,' the young
man repeated wearily. 'Believe me, the things I've seen here… but there's
nothing that can be done at this end. At least nothing you'd consider.'
'And what wouldn't I
consider?'
The young man told him.
Oh, bother the girl,
thought Quin. He had a sleeper booked on the evening train; the exams began in
less than a week. When he took his sabbatical, he'd promised to be back for the
end of term. Letting his deputy mark his papers was no part of his plan.
He turned into the
Felsengasse and went up to the first floor. The door was wide open. In the
hallway, the mirror was smashed, the umbrella stand lay on its side. The word Jude
had been smeared in yellow paint across the photograph of the Professor shaking
hands with the Kaiser. In the drawing room, pictures had been ripped off the
walls; the palm tree, tipped out of its pot, lay sprawled on the carpet. The
silver ornaments were missing, the Afghan rug… In the dining room, the doors
were torn from the dresser, the Meissen porcelain was gone.
On the verandah, Ruth's
painted cradle had been kicked into splintered wood.
He had forgotten the
physical effects of rage. He had to draw several deep breaths before the
giddiness passed and he could turn and go downstairs.
This time the concierge was
in her box.
'What happened to Professor
Berger's apartment?'
She looked nervously at the
open door, behind which he could see an old man with his legs stretched out,
reading a paper.
'They came… some Brown
Shirts… just a gang of thugs. They do that when an apartment is abandoned. It's
not official, but no one stops them.' She sniffed. 'I don't know what to do.
The Professor asked me to look after his flat, but how can I? A German diplomat
is moving in next week.'
'And Fraulein Berger? What
happened to her?'
'I don't know.' Another
uneasy glance through the open door. 'I can't tell you anything.'
He was halfway down the
street when he heard her cracked old voice calling him - and as he turned she
came hurrying up, still in her foulard apron.
'She gave me this to give
you. But you won't say anything, will you, Herr Doktor? My husband's
been a Nazi for years and he'd never forgive me. I could get into awful trouble.'
She handed him a white
envelope from which, when he opened it, there fell two keys.
Ruth had always loved the
statue of the Empress Maria Theresia on her marble plinth. Flanked by her
generals, a number of horses and some box hedges, she gazed at the strolling
Viennese with the self-satisfied look of a good hausfrau who has left her
larder full and her cupboards tidy. Every school child knew that it was she who
had made Austria great, that the six-year-old Mozart had sat on her knee, that
her daughter, Marie Antoinette, had married the King of France and lost her
head.
But for Ruth the plump and
homely Empress was something more: she was the guardian of the two great
museums which flanked the square that bore her name. To the south was the
Museum of Art - a gigantic, mock Renaissance palace which housed the famous
Titians, the Rembrandts, the finest Breughels in the world. To the north - its
replica down to the last carved pillar and ornamented dome - was the Museum of
Natural History. As a child she had loved both museums. The Art Museum belonged
to her mother and it was filled with uplift and suffering and love - rather a
lot of love. The Madonnas loved their babies, Jesus loved the poor sinners, and
St Francis loved the birds.
In the Natural History
Museum there wasn't any love, only sex - but there were stories and imagined
journeys -and there was work. This was her father's world and Ruth,
when she went there, was a child set apart. For when she had had her fill of
the cassowary on his nest and the elephant seal with his enormous, rearing
chest, and the glinting ribbons of the snakes, each in its jar of coloured
fluid, she could go through a magic door and enter, like Alice, a secret,
labyrinthine world.
For here, behind the
gilded, silent galleries with their grey-uniformed attendants, was a warren of
preparation rooms and laboratories, of workshops and sculleries and offices. It
was here that the real work of the museum was done: here was the nerve centre
of scholarship and expertise which reached out to every country in the world.
Since she was tiny, Ruth had been allowed to watch and help. Sometimes there
was a dinosaur being assembled on a stand; sometimes she was allowed to
sprinkle preservative on a stretched-out skin or polish glass slides for a
histologist drawing the mauve and scarlet tissues of a cell, and her father's
room was as familiar to her as his study in the Felsengasse.
In earlier times, Ruth
might have sought sanctuary in a temple or a church. Now, homeless and
desolate, she came to this place.
It was Tuesday, the day the
museum was closed to the public. Silently, she opened the side door and made
her way up the stairs.
Her father's room was
exactly as he had left it. His lab coat was behind the door; his notes, beside
a pile of reprints, were on the desk. On a work bench by the window was the
tray of fossil bones he had been sorting before he left. No one yet had
unscrewed his name from the door, nor confiscated the two sets of keys, one of
which she had left with the concierge.
She put her suitcase down
by the filing cabinet and wandered through into the cloakroom with its gas ring
and kettle. Leading out of it was a preparation room with shelves of
bottles and a camp bed on which scientists or technicians working long hours
sometimes slept for a while.
'Oh God, let him come,'
prayed Ruth.
But why should he come,
this Englishman who owed her nothing? Why should he even have got the keys she
had left with the concierge? Hardly aware of what she was doing, she pulled a
stool towards the tray of jumbled bones and began, with practised fingers, to
separate out the vertebrae, brushing them free of earth and fragments of rock.
As she bent forward, her hair fell on the tray and she gathered it together and
twisted it into a coil, jamming a long-handled paintbrush through its mass.
Heini liked her hair long and she'd learnt that trick from a Japanese girl at
the university.
The silence was palpable.
It was early evening now; everyone had gone home. Not even the water pipes, not
even the lift, made their usual sounds. Painstakingly, pointlessly, Ruth went
on sorting the ancient cave bear bones and waited without hope for the arrival
of the Englishman.
Yet when she heard the key
turn in the door, she did not dare to turn her head. Then came footsteps which,
surprisingly, were already familiar, and an arm stretched over her shoulder so
that for a moment she felt the cloth of his jacket against her cheek.
'No, not that one,' said a
quiet voice. 'I think you'll find that doesn't match the type. Look at the size
of the neural canal.'
She leant back in her
chair, feeling suddenly safe, remembering the hands of her piano teacher coming
down over her own to help her with an errant chord.
Quin, meanwhile, was
registering a number of features revealed by Ruth's skewered hair: ears… the
curve of her jaw… and those vulnerable hollows at the back of the neck which prevent
the parents of young children from murdering them.
'How quick you are,' she
said, watching his long fingers move among the fragmented bones. And then: 'You
had no luck at the Consulate?'
'No, I had no luck. But
we'll get you out of Vienna. What happened back at the flat? Did you save
anything?'
She pointed to her
suitcase. 'Frau Hautermanns warned me that they were coming.' i
'The concierge?'
'Yes. I packed some things
and went down the fire escape. They weren't after me. Not this time.'
He was silent, still
automatically sorting the specimens. Then he pushed away the tray !
'Have you eaten anything
today?'
She shook her head.
'Good. I've brought a
picnic. Rather a special one. Where shall we have it?'
'I suppose it ought to be
in here. I can clear the table and there's another chair next door.'
'I said a picnic,’
said Quin sternly. 'In Britain a picnic means sitting on the ground and being
uncomfortable, preferably in the rain. Now where shall we go? Africa? You have
a fine collection of lions, I see; a little moth-eaten perhaps, but very nicely
mounted. Or there's the Amazon - I'm partial to anacondas, aren't you? No,
wait; what about the Arctic? I've brought rather a special Chablis and it's
best served chilled.'
Ruth shook her head. 'The
polar bear was almost my favourite when I was small, but I don't want to get
chilblains - I might drop my sandwiches. You don't want to go back in time? To
the Dinosaur Hall?'
'No. Too much like work.
And frankly I'm not too happy about that ichthyosaurus. Whoever assembled that
skeleton had a lot of imagination.'
Ruth flushed. 'It was old
Schumacher. He was very ill and he so much wanted to get it finished before he
died.' And then: 'I know! Let's goto Madagascar! The Ancient Continent of
Lemuria! There's an aye-aye there, a baby - such a sad-looking little
thing. You'll really like the aye-aye.'
Quin nodded. 'Madagascar it
shall be. Perhaps you can find us a towel or some newspaper; that's all we
need. I'm sure eating here's against the regulations but we won't let that
trouble us.'
She disappeared into the
cloakroom and came back with a folded towel, and with her hair released from
its skewer. There could be doubts about her face thought Quin, with its
contrasting motifs, but none about her impossible, unruly, unfashionable hair.
Touched now by the last rays of the sinking sun, it gave off a tawny, golden
warmth that lifted the heart.
It was a strange walk they
took through the enormous, shadowy rooms, watched by creatures preserved for
ever in their moment of time. Antelopes no bigger than cats raised one leg,
ready to flee across the sandy veld. The monkeys of the New World hung, huddled
and melancholy, from branches - and by a window a dodo, idiotic-looking and
extinct, sat on a nest of reconstructed eggs.
Madagascar was all that
Ruth had promised. Ring-tailed lemurs with piebald faces held nuts in their
amazingly human hands. A pair of indris, cosy and fluffy like children's toys,
groomed each other's fur. Tiny mouse lemurs clustered round a coconut.
And alone, close to the
glass, the aye-aye… Only half-grown, hideous and melancholy, with huge
despairing eyes, naked ears and one uncannily extended finger, like the finger
of a witch.
'I don't know why I like it
so much,' said Ruth. 'I suppose because it's a sort of outcast - so ugly and
lonely and sad.'
'It has every reason to be
sad,' said Quin. 'The natives are terrified of them - they run off shrieking
when they see one. Though I did find one tribe who believe they have the power
to carry the souls of the dead to heaven.'
She turned to him eagerly.
'Of course, you've been there, haven't you? With the French expedition? It must
be so beautiful!'
Quin nodded. 'It's like
nowhere else on earth. The trees are so tangled with vines and orchids - you
can't believe the scent. And the sunbirds, and the chameleons…'
'You're so lucky. I was
going to travel with my father as soon as I was old enough, but now…' She
groped for her handkerchief and tried again. 'I'm sure that tribe was right,'
she said, turning back to the aye-aye. 'I'm sure they can carry the souls of
the dead to heaven.' She was silent for a moment, looking at the pathetic
embalmed creature behind the glass. 'You can have my soul,' she said under her
breath. 'You can have it any time you like.'
Quin glanced at her but
said nothing. Instead, he took the towel and spread it on the parquet. Then he
began to unpack the hamper.
There was a jar of pate and
another of pheasant breasts. There were fresh rolls wrapped in a snowy napkin
and pats of butter in a tiny covered dish. He had brought the first
Morello cherries and grapes
and two chocolate souffles in fluted pots. The plates were of real china; the
long-stemmed goblets of real glass.
'I think you'll like the
wine,' said Quin, lifting a bottle out of its wooden coffin. 'And I haven't
forgotten the corkscrew!'
'How did you do it
all? How could you get all that? How did you have the time?'
'I just went into a shop
and told them what I wanted. It only took ten minutes. All I had to do was
pay.'
She watched him lay out the
picnic, amazed that he was thus willing to serve her. Was it British to be like
this, or was it something about him personally? Her father - all the men she
knew - would have sat back and waited for their wives.
When it was finished it was
like a banquet in a fairy story, yet like playing houses when one was a child.
But when she began to eat, there were no more thoughts; she was famished; it
was all she could do to remember her manners.
'Oh, it's so good!
And the wine is absolutely lovely. It's not strong is it?'
'Well…' He was about to
advise caution but decided against it. Tonight she was entitled to repose
however it was brought about.
'Where have your parents
gone to?' he said presently, as they sat side by side, leaning their backs
against a radiator. 'I mean, what part of London?'
'Belsize Park. It's in the
north-west, do you know it?'
'Yes.' The dreary streets
with their dilapidated Victorian terraces, the cat-infested gardens of what had
once been a prosperous suburb, passed before his mind. 'A lot of refugees live
there,' he said cheerfully. 'And it's very near Hampstead Heath, which is
beautiful.' (Near, but not very near… Hampstead, at the top of the hill, was a
different world with its pretty cottages, its magnolia trees, and the blue
plaques announcing that Keats had lived there, and Robert Louis Stevenson, and
a famous Admiral of the Fleet.) 'And Heini will go there too?'
'Yes; very soon. He's in
Budapest getting his emigration papers and saying goodbye to his father, but
there won't be any trouble. He's Hungarian and the Nazis don't have anything to
say there. He had to go quickly because he's completely Jewish. After the
goat-herding lady died, my grandfather married the daughter of a rabbi who
already had a little girl - she was a widow - and that was Heini's mother, so
we're not blood relations.' She turned to him, cupping her glass. 'He's a
marvellous pianist. A real one. He was going to have his debut with the
Philharmonic… three days after Hitler marched in.'
'That's rough.'
'Yes. He was absolutely
frantic. I didn't know how to comfort him; not properly.'
She retreated momentarily
into her hair.
'And you're going to get
married?'
'Yes… Well, Heini doesn't
talk a lot about getting married because he's a musician… an artist… and they
don't talk much about bourgeois things like marriage - but we're going to be
together. Properly, I mean. We were going to go away together after the
concert, to Italy. I'd have gone earlier but my parents are very old-fashioned…
also there was the thing about Chopin and the etudes.'
The fork which Quin had
been conveying to his mouth stayed arrested in his hand. 'I'm sorry, I'm afraid
you've lost me. How do Chopin etudes come into this?'
Too late, Ruth realized
where she was heading and looked with horror at her empty glass, experiencing
the painful moment when it becomes clear that what has been drunk cannot be
undrunk. It had been so lovely, the wine, like drinking fermented hope or
happiness, and now she was babbling and being indiscreet and would end up in
the gutter, a confirmed absinthe drinker destined for a pauper's grave.
But Quin was waiting and
she plunged.
'Heini had a professor who
told him that Chopin thought that every time he made love he was depriving the
world of an etude. I mean that… you know… the same energy goes into composing
and… the other thing. A sort of vital force. And this professor thought it was
good for Heini to wait. But then Heini found out that the professor was wrong
about the way to finger the Appassionata, so then he thought maybe he was wrong
about Chopin too. Because there was George Sand, wasn't there?'
'There was indeed,' said
Quin, deeply entertained by this gibberish. It wasn't till they had finished
the meal and Ruth, moving nimbly in the gathering darkness, had cleared away and
packed up the hamper, that he said: 'I've been thinking what to do. I think we
must get you out of Vienna to somewhere quiet and safe in the country. Then we
can start again from England. I know a couple of people in the Foreign Office;
I'll be able to pull strings. I doubt if anyone will bother you away from the
town and I shall make sure that you have plenty of money to see you through.
With your father and all of us working away at the other end we'll be able to
get you across before too long. But you must get away from here. Is there
anyone you could go to?'
'There's my old nurse. She
lives by the Swiss border, in the Vorarlberg. She'd have me, but I don't know
if I ought to inflict myself on anyone. If I'm unclean — '
'Don't talk like that,' he
said harshly. 'And don't insult people who love you and will want to help you.
Now tell me exactly where she lives and I'll see to everything. What about
tonight?'
'I'm going to stay here.
There's a camp bed.'
He was about to protest,
suggesting that she come back to Sacher's, but the memory of the German
officers crowding the bar prevented him.
'Take care then. What about
the night watchman?'
'He won't come into my
father's room. And if he does, he's known me since I was a baby.'
'You can't trust anyone,'
he said.
'If I can't trust Essler,
I'll die,' said Ruth.
At two in the morning, Quin
got out of bed and wondered what had made him leave a girl hardly out of the
schoolroom to spend a night alone in a deserted building full of shadows and
ghosts. Dressing quickly, he made his way down the Ringstrasse, crossed the
Theresienplatz, and let himself in by the side entrance.
Ruth was asleep on the camp
bed in the preparation room. Her hair streamed onto the floor and she was
holding something in her arms as a child holds a well-loved toy. Professor
Berger's master key unlocked also the exhibition cases. It was the huge-eyed
aye-aye that Ruth held to her breast. Its long tail curved up stiffly over her
hand and its muzzle lay against her shoulder.
Quin, looking down at her,
could only pray that, as she slept, the creature that she cradled was carrying
her soul to the rain-washed streets of Belsize Park, and the country which now
sheltered all those that she loved.
Leonie Berger got carefully
out of bed and turned over the pillow so that her husband, who was pretending
to be asleep on the other side of the narrow, lumpy mattress, would not notice
the damp patch made by her tears. Then she washed and dressed very attentively,
putting on high-heeled court shoes, silk stockings, a black shirt and crisply
ironed white blouse, because she was Viennese and one dressed properly even
when one's world had ended.
Then she started being good.
Leonie had been brave when
they left Vienna, secreting a diamond brooch in her corset which was foolhardy
in the extreme. She had been sensible and loving, for that was her nature,
making sure that the one suitcase her husband was allowed to take contained all
the existing notes for his book on Mammals of the Pleistocene, his
stomach pills and the special nail clippers which alone enabled him to manicure
his toes. She had been patient with her sister-in-law, Hilda, who was
emigrating on a domestic work permit, but had fallen over her untied shoelaces
as they made their way onto the Channel steamer, and she had cradled the infant
of a fellow refugee while his mother was sick over the rails. Even when she saw
the accommodation rented for them by their sponsor, a distantly related dentist
who had emigrated years earlier and built up a successful practice in the West
End, Leonie only grumbled a little. The rooms on the top floor of a dilapidated
lodging house in Belsize Close were cold and dingy, the furniture hideous, the
cooking facilities horrific, but they were cheap.
But that was when she
thought Ruth was waiting for them in the student camp on the South Coast. Since
the letter had come from the Quaker Relief Organization to say that Ruth was
not on the train, Leonie had started being good.
This meant never at any
moment criticizing a single thing. It meant inhaling with delight the smell of
slowly expiring cauliflower from the landing where a female psychoanalyst from
Breslau shared their cooker. It meant admiring the scrofulous tom cats yowling
in the square of rubble that passed for a garden. It meant being enchanted by
the hissing gas fire which ate pennies and gave out only fumes and blue flames.
It meant angering no living thing, standing aside from houseflies, consuming
with gratitude a kind of brown sauce which came in bottles and was called
coffee. It meant telling God or anyone else who would listen at all hours of
the day and night, that she would never again complain whatever happened if
only Ruth was safe and came to them.
By 7.30, Leonie had
prepared breakfast for her family -bread spread with margarine, a substance
they had never previously tasted - and sent Hilda, with red-rimmed eyes, off to
her job as housemaid to a Mrs Manfred in Golders Green. If she hadn't been so
desperate about Ruth, Leonie would have greatly pitied her sister-in-law, who
was constantly bitten by Mrs Manfred's pug and found it impossible to believe
that a bath, once cleaned, also had to be dried, but now she could
only be thankful that Hilda would not be around to 'help' her with her chores.
At eight o'clock, Uncle
Mishak, the English dictionary in the pocket of his coat, set off up the hill
to join the long queue of foreigners in Hampstead Town Hall who waited daily
for news of relatives, for instructions, for permission to remain - and as he
walked, a tiny compact figure stopping to examine a rose bush in a garden or
address an unattended-dog, he was hailed by the acquaintances this kind old man
had made even in the ten days he had been in exile.
'Heard anything yet?' asked
the man in the tobacco kiosk, and as Mishak shook his head: 'There'll be news
today, maybe. They're coming over all the time. She'll come, you'll see.'
The cockney flower seller
with the feather in her battered hat, from whom Mishak had bought nothing, told
him to keep his pecker up; a tramp with whom he'd shared a park bench one
afternoon stopped to ask after Ruth.
And as Uncle Mishak made
his way up the hill, Professor Berger, holding himself very erect, forcing
himself to swing his walking stick, made his way downhill for the daily journey
to Bloomsbury House where a bevy of Quakers, social workers and civil servants
tried to sort out the movements of the dispossessed - and as he walked through
the grey streets whose very stones seemed to be permeated with homesickness, he
raised his hat to other exiles going about their business.
'Any news of your
daughter?' enquired Dr Levy, the renowned heart specialist who spent his days
in the public library studying to resit his medical exams in English.
'You've heard something?'
asked Paul Ziller, the leader of the Ziller Quartet. He had no work permit, his
quartet was disbanded, but each day he went to the Jewish Day Centre to
practise in an unused cloakroom, and each night he dressed up in a cummerbund
to play bogus gypsy music in a Hungarian restaurant in exchange for his food.
Left alone in the dingy
rooms, Leonie continued to be good. There were plenty of opportunities for this
as she set about the housework. The thick layer of grease where the
psychoanalyst's stew had boiled over would normally have sent her raging down
to the second-floor front where Fraulein Lutzenholler sat under a picture of
Freud and mourned, but she wiped it up without a word. The bathroom, shared by
all the occupants, provided almost unlimited opportunities for virtue. There
was a black rim around the bath, the soaked bathmat was crumpled up in a
corner… and Miss Bates, a nursery school teacher and the only British survivor
at Number 27, had hung a row of dripping camiknickers on a sagging piece of
string.
None of it mattered. Loving
Miss Bates, hoping she would find a husband soon, Leonie wrung out the
knickers, cleaned the bath. She had had servants all her life, but she knew how
to work. Now everything she did was offered up to God: the Catholic God of her
childhood, the Jewish God on whose behalf all these bewildered people roamed
the streets of North-West London… any God, what did it matter so long as he
brought her her child?
Then, at twelve o'clock,
she renewed her make-up and set off for the Willow Tea Rooms.
'It's bad news, I'm
afraid,' said Miss Maud, filling the sugar bowls and looking out of the window
at Leonie Berger's slow progress across the square. Even at a distance it was
easy to see how carefully she walked, with what politeness she spoke to the
pigeons who crossed her path.
And: 'It's bad news,' said
her sister, Miss Violet, carrying a tray of empty cups to Mrs Burtt in the
kitchen, who took her arms out of the washing-up water and said that Hitler
would have something to answer for if ever she got hold of him.
Miss Maud and Miss Violet
Harper had started the Willow Tea Rooms five years earlier when it was discovered
that their father, the General, had not been as provident as they had hoped. It
was a pretty place on the corner of a small square behind Belsize Lane and they
had made it nice with willow-pattern china, dimity curtains and a pottery cat
on the windowsill. Reared to regard foreigners as, at best, unfortunate, the
ladies had stoutly resisted the demands of the refugees who increasingly
thronged the district. The Glori-ette in St John's Wood might serve cakes with
outlandish names and slop whipped cream over everything, the proprietors of the
Cosmo in Finchley might supply newspapers on sticks and permit talk across the
tables, but in the" Willow Tea Rooms, the decencies were preserved.
Customers were offered scones or sponge fingers and, at lunchtime, scrambled
eggs on toast, but nothing ever with a smell- and anyone sitting more
than half an hour over a cup of coffee, got coughed at, first by Miss Violet,
and if this was ineffectual, by the fiercer Miss Maud.
Yet by the summer of 1938,
as the bewildered Austrians joined the refugees from Nazi Germany, the ladies,
imperceptibly, had changed. For who could cough at Dr Levy, with his walrus
moustache and wise brown eyes, not after he had diagnosed Miss Violet's
bursitis - and who could help laughing at Mr Ziller's imitation of himself
playing "Dark Eyes" on the violin to an American lady with a faulty
hearing aid?
And now there was Mrs
Berger who had come in on her first day in England with her
distinguished-looking husband and her nice old uncle, and praised the sponge
fingers and showed them photos of her pretty, snub-nosed daughter. Ruth was
coming, she was going to study here; soon her boyfriend, a brilliant concert
pianist, would follow. The change in Mrs Berger since then had shaken even the
General's daughters, used as they were to stones of loss and grief.
Leonie entered the cafe,
navigated to the chair which Paul Ziller drew out for her, nodded at the actor
from the Vienna Burg Theatre in the corner, at old Mrs Weiss in her feathered
toque, at an English lady with a poodle…
Dr Levy put down his book
on The Diseases of the Knee which he had understood intimately twenty
years ago, but which came less trippingly in English from the tongue of a
middle-aged heart specialist who'd had no breakfast.
'I have heard that many
student transports are coming in now to Scotland,' he said, speaking English in
deference to the lady with a poodle.
'Yes, thank you,' said
Leonie carefully. 'My husband enquires.'
Miss Maud, unasked, set
down Leonie's usual cup of coffee. The actor from the Burg Theatre - a
fair-haired, alarmingly handsome man exiled for politics not race - said many
people were escaping through Portugal, a fact confirmed by the couple from
Hamburg at a corner table.
Paul Ziller said nothing,
only patted Leonie's hand. Lonely beyond belief without the three men with whom
he had made music for a decade, he was remembering the comical, blonde child
who had climbed out of her cot the first time the quartet had played for
Professor Berger's birthday and come stamping down the corridor in a nightdress
and nappies, refusing absolutely to be returned to bed.
Mrs Weiss, her auburn wig
askew under her hat, now launched into an incoherent story involving a missing
girl who had turned up unexpectedly on a milk train to Dieppe.
The scourge of the Willow
Tea Rooms, she was seventy-two years old and had been rescued by her prosperous
lawyer son from the village in East Prussia where she had lived all her life.
The lawyer now owned a mock Tudor mansion in Hampstead Garden Suburb, a
fishpond, and an English wife who deposited her dreadful mother-in-law each
morning in the cafe with a fistful of conscience money. The words 'I buy you a
cake?' struck dread into the other habitues who knew that acceptance meant
listening to Mrs Weiss' interminable lament about her daughter-in-law who did
not allow her to fry onions, speak to the maids, or help.
When she had finished, the
English lady, who for a year had refused to speak across the tables, said that
if Leonie really was an Aquarian, the stars in the Daily Telegraph
that morning had been entirely favourable.
'It definitely said that
you can expect a pleasant surprise,' said Mrs Fowler, feeding a biscuit to the
dog.
But when Professor Berger
came in, weary from his long walk up the hill, and then Uncle Mishak, it was
clear that the stars in the the Telegraph had not prevailed.
'Well, tomorrow, perhaps,'
said Miss Maud, putting down the plate of bread and butter which was the
Bergers' lunch. 'Yes, tomorrow,' echoed Miss Violet. And Leonie said, yes, and
thank you, and remembered to ask about the wedding of Mrs Burtt's niece, and
the cat which had had kittens in an unsuitable linen basket in the ladies' flat
above the shop.
Then Professor Berger
picked up his manuscript on The Mammals of the Pleistocene and went
with Dr Levy to the public library, and Paul Ziller went to play Bach partitas
among the wash basins and lockers of the Day Centre, and the actor (who had
declaimed Schiller from Europe's most prestigious stage) made his way to the
casting offices in Wardour Street to see if someone would let him say Schweinehund
in a film about wicked German soldiers in the Great War.
'We go to look for
schnitzel?' said Mrs Weiss, cocking her raddled head at Leonie. And Leonie
nodded and accompanied the old lady out into the street and into the shop of
the nearby butcher with whom Mrs Weiss did daily battle - for helping Mrs Weiss
to procure the delicate veal suitable for frying and thus confound her
daughter-in-law was so time-consuming and so tiresome that it had - oh, surely
- to be classed as Being Good.
Until the long day was done
at last and Hilda returned with a hole in her skirt where she had caught it in
Mrs Manfred's carpet sweeper, and Uncle Mishak changed into his pyjamas in his
cupboard of a room and said, 'Good night, Marianne,' as he had said every night
for eighteen years and not stopped saying when she died. And Leonie and her
husband climbed into their lumpy bed, and held each other in their arms - and
did not sleep.
But in the flat above the
Willow Tea Rooms, a light still burned.
'I suppose we could
serve some of those cakes of theirs,' said Miss Maud as the two ladies, in
flannel dressing-gowns, sat over their cocoa.
'Oh, Maud! Not… strudels?
I'm sure Father would not have wished us to serve anything like that.' Three
years younger than her sister, Violet was less skeletally thin and, at
forty-three, her hair still retained traces of brown.
'No, not strudels, I agree.
That would be going too far. But there's one they all talk about. It begins
with a G. Sounds like guggle… Guglhupf or something.'
Violet put down her cup.
'Buy it in from the Continental Bakery, you mean?'
'Certainly not. There is no
question of anything being bought in. But I did just glance at the recipe when
I was in the library,' said Miss Maud, blushing like someone admitting to a
peep at a pornographic magazine. 'You need a mould, but it isn't difficult.'
There are many ways of
helping. That early summer evening when Ruth was lost in Europe and the first
air-raid sirens were tried out in Windsor Castle, the ladies of the Willow Tea
Rooms let compassion override principle.
'Well, if you think so,
Maud,' said Violet - and they put the cat in with the kittens, and washed up
their cocoa cups, and went to bed.
The Franz Joseph Station,
at two in the afternoon, was relatively quiet. Only local trains left from
platform seven. Here there were none of the tragic scenes of parting; weeping
parents, children with labels on their coats being sent to safety abroad. The
wooden third-class carriages were filled with peasant women carrying bundles
and babies, or chickens in coops. '
Ruth, leaning out of the
carriage window, was dressed as they were in a dirndl and loden cape, a
kerchief round her head. She had found an old rucksack in one of her father's
cupboards and repacked her few belongings. With her unruly Rapunzel hair
straight-jacketed into two pigtails, she looked about sixteen years old and
seemed to be in excellent spirits.
'And I can do the local
dialect; you'll see, I'll be fine. Only you shouldn't have given me so much
money.'
'Don't be silly, I can well
afford it, I've told you.'
Quin had put off his
departure for yet another day, determined to hear of her safe arrival,
schooling his impatience as cables and telephone messages from England
collected at Sacher's. Ruth had spent two nights at the museum; no one had
given her away, not the cleaning lady, not the night watchman, and Quin,
relieved that his task was nearly done, smiled at her with avuncular kindness.
'I think I must be the
richest peasant girl in the whole of Austria,' she said. 'But I'll pay you
back. On Mozart's head, I swear it.'
He made a dismissive
gesture. 'No need to trouble the composer.'
The guard came by, doors
were slammed. The self-important engine emitted clouds of steam, and under
cover of the noise, Ruth leant over to speak into his ear.
'Please, when you go and
see my parents will you tell them not to worry -'
'Of course.'
'No, I mean tell them I'll
be with them very soon. In less than a month, I hope. I know exactly
what to do.'
Apprehension seized him.
'What do you mean?'
The mail had been loaded now.
A last door slammed - and Ruth's face came out of the steam, radiant and
self-assured.
'I'm going to walk over the
mountains into Switzerland,' she said. 'I've done it before when I was staying
there. You go over the Kanderspitze; it's only a few hours. I did it with one
of the boys from the farm and the guards didn't even turn round!'
'For God's sake, girl, that
was before Hitler and all his devilry. The Swiss are armed and on the alert.
Next thing they'll shoot you for a spy.'
'No, they won't. I promise
I'll be all right. Then when I'm safe in Switzerland I'll make my way to the
French border and swim the Varne - it's a tributary of the Rhone and it's not
at all wide; I've looked it up on the map. After all Piatigorsky swam
the Sbruch with his cello over his head to get away from the Russians so I
ought to manage with a rucksack. I'm a very good swimmer because of my Aunt
Hilda… Do you remember she did this breast stroke where she never actually
moved and I got used to pushing her across the lake. And once I'm in France all
I have to do is contact my father's cousin. He's got a boat and he'll take me
across the Channel, I know, so -' She broke off. 'What are you doing}
You're hurting me! Let me go!'
Quin had opened the door;
his hand gripped her arm; he was pulling her out of the train.
'Will you be quiet,''
he said furiously. 'Climbing the Kanderspitze, swimming the Varne… you're like
a child of ten. Do you think this is a girl's adventure story? "Ruth of
the Remove"? The world's on the brink of- oh, to hell!'
She was down on the
platform now. Tightening his grip as she struggled, he reached out for the
rucksack which a peasant lady, approving of masterful males, had taken from the
rack. The guard, scowling at the commotion, closed the door and raised his
whistle to his mouth.
'You have no right?
said Ruth. Still fighting him, twisting her head, she saw her train draw away,
gather speed, and vanish.
'Get me a taxi,' Quin
snapped at a grinning porter.
'I'll never forgive you for
this,' she said.
'That is something I shall
have to live with,' said Quin and pushed her into the cab.
It had been a mistake to
introduce the word morganatic into a conversation that was already
going badly. Quin had had a sleepless night and spent the last forty-eight
hours bullying, bribing, cajoling and confronting a series of officials or he
would not have done anything so stupid, the more so as they were speaking
English. Ruth's Aberdonian accent was only vestigial now, she was entirely
fluent, but over the concept of a morganatic marriage, this over-educated girl
had clearly met her Waterloo.
'Who is he, this Morgan?'
she asked.
'He isn't anyone,' said
Quin, sighing. They were sitting in a cafe in the Stadtpark and he was almost
certain that at any moment someone would start playing Strauss. 'The word
morganatic comes from the Latin matrimonium ad morganaticum - a
marriage based on the morning gift. It's a gift given the morning after the
bridal night with which the husband, by bestowing it, frees himself from any
liability to the wife. Like Franz Ferdinand. His wife didn't have any of his
titles or responsibilities.'
If he had hoped to dispose
of the subject by mentioning Austria's most unpopular archduke, he was
unfortunate.
'But you say we wouldn't
have a bridal night, so Morgan doesn't come into it.'
Quin drained his glass of
schnapps and set it down. He was not a man for headaches, but he had one now.
'Yes, that's right. Ours would simply be a marriage in name only. A formality.
I'm merely pointing out that there are many ways of dealing with marriage other
than the conventional -' He broke off. It was as he had thought. At least a
dozenladies in braided uniforms had come on to the bandstand. Not just
Strauss, but Strauss played
by women dressed like Grenadier Guards.
'What's the matter?'
'Are they going to play
Strauss?'
'Yes,' said Ruth happily.
'They're the All Girl Band from the Prater - they're terribly good!' And
looking at him incredulously: 'Don't you like waltzes?'
'Not before tea.' He
frowned, mastering his impatience. By day, he and Ruth, speaking only English,
could pass for foreign visitors, but she was still sleeping in the museum and
it was only a matter of time before someone gave her away.
'Look, Ruth, let's not
waste any more time. I've got to get back to England, you want to go there. The
consul here will marry us - it'll take a few minutes, it'll be a mere
formality. Then you'll be put on my passport as my wife -in effect you become a
British subject. When we get to London we go our separate ways and dissolve the
marriage on the grounds of- ' He stopped himself just in time. Non-consummation
on top of morganatic marriage was not something he was willing to discuss to
the sound of Strauss with this obstinate girl.
Ruth was silent, tilting
the lemonade in her glass. 'It is a pity there is no Morgan,' she said. 'He
could help one to choose the morning gift. It would have to be something very
nice so that one would not mind not having responsibilities. A St Bernard dog,
perhaps.'
'Well, there isn't. If
there was, he would probably be a Welshman from Pontypool and a rugger blue.'
'A Welshman? Why is that?'
Quin leaned across the
table and laid a hand briefly on hers. 'Listen, Ruth, we have finished with
Morgan, right? The subject is closed. I'll fetch you at eleven from the museum;
we'll be married at noon and by the evening we'll be on the sleeper.'
He had risen, but she did
not follow suit. 'Don't you see, I can't let you do this,' she said in a low
voice. 'There must be someone in England that you want to marry.'
'Well, there isn't. As for
your Heini, surely he'd rather you were safe and reunited with him even if it
means waiting a little while before you can be married? Think how you would
feel if the positions were reversed?'
'Yes, I would do anything
to be with Heini,' she said quietly. 'Only it isn't fair. I can't ask it of you
and - '
But Quin was looking at the
bandstand where the worst was happening. 'For heaven's sake, let's get out of
here,' he said, pulling her to her feet. 'That trout in the helmet has raised
her baton.'
'It's Wiener Blut?
said Ruth reproachfully, as the luscious waltz soared out over the park.
'I don't care what it is,'
said Quin - and fled.
The night had been stormy,
but now the sky was clearing and over Lindisfarne, the Holy Island, a thin
strip of silver light appeared, widened… and the sea, which minutes before had
been turbulent and dark, became suddenly, unbelievably blue. Three cormorants
skimmed over the water, heading for the Fames, and from the bird-hung cliffs
came the incessant mewing of the nesting kittiwakes and terns.
But the elderly lady,
formidably dressed in dark purple tweeds, her iron-grey hair concealed under a
woollen scarf adorned with the bridles of horses and their whips, was not
gazing either at the birds, nor at the round heads of the seals bobbing off
Bowmont Point. Standing on the terrace of Bowmont, she trained her binoculars
on the long, golden strand of Bowmont Bay. The tide was out, revealing the rock
pools at either end, and the crescent of perfect sand ran for half a mile
before the next headland, but polluting its emptiness, ruining its peace, were…
people. Three; no, more… A whole family, paddling and, no doubt, shrieking,
though they were mercifully out of earshot. She could make out a man and a
woman, and another woman… a grandmother. And a child. Not fishermen or village
people going about their business.
''Trippers!' pronounced Miss
Somerville. Her voice was deep, her outrage total.
They would have to go. They
would have to be shooed away. It was happening more and more. People came up
from Newcastle or down from Berwick. Holiday-makers, tourists, defiling the
empty places, catching shrimps, wearing idiotic clothes…
Bowmont had been built on a
promontory: an old peel tower to which, generations ago, had been added a wing
of ochre stone. Lonely, wind-buffeted, its history was Northumbria's own -
raided by the Danes from the sea, by the Scots from the land, besieged by
Warwick the Kingmaker; ruined and rebuilt.
Turner had painted it in a
turbulent sunset, a sailing boat listing dangerously at the base of its
sea-lashed cliffs. St Cuthbert, on Lindisfarne, had preached to the eider ducks
which still nested on Bowmont Point, and from the white needle of Longstone
lighthouse, Grace Darling had rowed into legend, bringing rescue to the
shipwrecked wretches on Harcar Rock. Quin, as a child, had known exactly where
God lived. Not in the Holy Land as painted in his illustrated bible, but in the
swirling, ever-changing, cloud-wracked sky above his home.
Frances Somerville had been
forty years old, a spinster still living at home, when old Quinton Somerville,
the legendary and terrifying "Basher", retired from the navy, had
sent for her.
'I'm going to die soon,'
the Basher had said. 'I want you to come to Bowmont and look after the boy till
he's of age.'
Frances had refused. She
disliked the old man, who had made no secret of the fact that as a plain,
unmarried woman, she was entirely without consequence. Then Quin, aged ten, was
sent for and introduced.
'I'll come when you're
dead,' Frances said that evening-but she did not believe that the bucolic old
reprobate was anywhere near his end.
She was wrong. The Basher
was found dead on a garden seat not three months later, and in his own way he
had played fair, for he had left her a comfortable annuity out of his
admittedly vast estate. Since then she had been Bowmont's guardian and its
chatelaine and with Quin so often away on his travels, that meant keeping it
free from invaders, from the creeping stain of tourism and so-called modern
life.
Now in her sixtieth year,
big-nosed, tight-lipped, with sparse grey hair and fierce blue eyes, her
opinion of the human race was low. An abandoned seal pup, a puffin with a
broken wing, could count on Miss Somerville for help; a human in a similar
plight would be lucky to get a cup of tea in the servants' quarter. Once,
rumour had it, it had been different. She had been sought in marriage by a
Scottish nobleman, despatched to his house to be looked over… but it had come
to nothing, and the shy, plain girl became the formidable spinster, respected
by all and loved by nobody.
A gardener's boy came
across the terrace, carrying a rake.
'You! George!' called Miss
Somerville, and the boy scuttled towards her and touched his cap.
'Yes, Miss Somerville.'
'Tell Turton there are
trippers at the end of the bay. They must be removed.'
'Yes, miss.'
The boy hurried away and
Miss Somerville turned her binoculars to the other side of the promontory.
Here, in the relative shelter of the curving cliff there was a smaller bay, the
sand dotted with rocks and dark drifts of seaweed. Anchorage Bay, it was
called, and in the previous century boats had tied up at the little jetty,
there had been fishermen living in the row of cottages and cobles drawn up on
the beach.
Those days were gone and
Quin had converted the boat-house and two of the cottages into a lab and dormitory
for the students he brought up for his field course. More people who did not
belong, she thought wearily, more defilement and chatter. Last year one of the
girls had worn a two-piece bathing costume and Miss Somerville's early morning
viewing through her binoculars had revealed the completely exposed midriff of a
girl from Surbiton.
The gardener's boy
reappeared.
'Please, miss, Mr Turton
says as they're between the tides, so he can't shoo 'em off right now. And he
says to tell you, miss, that Lady Rothley telephoned and she's coming at
eleven.'
Miss Somerville tightened
her lips. The tidemarks… the infuriating ancient law that decreed that the
shore between low tide and high tide belonged to everyone. It was nonsense, of
course. To get there they had come over Somerville land - the fields behind the
bay all belonged to Quin and she made sure that the gates were kept locked.
For a moment, she felt old
and discouraged. This was not her world. Beyond the point was ancient
Dunstanburgh with a golf course now lapping its ruined towers. Trippers could
creep in that way too and make their way to Bowmont. She was like King Canute,
struggling uselessly against the defilement of the human race.
And Quin didn't really help
her. Quin had ideas that she tried to understand but couldn't. Miss Somerville
loved no one; it was a point of honour with her to have banished this
destructive emotion from her breast, but Quin was Quin and she would have
jumped off the cliff for him without further consideration. And yet from this
boy, whom she herself had reared, came ideas and theories that she would not
have expected to read even in the Socialist gutter press. Quin did not chase
trippers off his land, merely requesting them to close the gates; he had
acknowledged a right of way across the dunes to Bowmont Mill, and now there was
talk of one day… not while she lived, perhaps… but one day, giving Bowmont to
the National Trust.
The dreaded words made Miss
Somerville shiver. The sun had established full dominion now; the terns were white
arrows against the indigo of the water; harebells and yarrow and clusters of
pink thrift glowed in the turf, but Miss Somerville, usually so observant, saw
only the spectre of the future. A car park in the Lower Meadow, refreshment
kiosks, charabancs with stinking exhaust pipes unloading trippers in the
forecourt. Poor Frampton had done it, given his home away, and there were
vulgar little green huts at the gates of Frampton Court and men in caps like
doormen punching tickets, and a tea room and souvenir stall. But Frampton had
an excuse; he was bankrupt. Quin had no such excuse. The farm was in profit,
the rents from the village brought in sufficient revenue to see to repairs, and
his inheritance from the Basher had left him a wealthy man. For Quin to give
away his heritage was irresponsible and mad.
She turned and went in
through a door beside the tower, to a store room which she had turned into a
kennel for her labradors.
'How are they, Martha?'
'Fine, Miss Frances. Just
fine.'
Martha had been sent to her
as a lady's maid, but Miss Somerville, returning from her broken engagement on
the Border, had refused any nonsense to do with dressing up and frippery, and
Martha now looked after the dogs.
The puppies were sucking:
five blissful, ever-swelling bags of milk whose mother thumped her tail in
greeting and let her head fall back again onto the straw.
There was good blood there.
Comely had been mated in Wales - Miss Somerville had taken her there herself
and it had been a bother, but it always paid to get decent stock.
Oh, why couldn't Quin
marry, she thought, making her way across the courtyard. Not one of those girls
he brought up sometimes: actresses or Parisiennes who came down to breakfast
shivering in fur coats and asked about central heating, but a girl of his own
kind, a girl with breeding. Once he had a lusty son or two, he'd forget all
this nonsense about the Trust.
Later, in the drawing room,
the subject came up again. Lady Rothley was the closet thing to a friend which
Frances Somerville allowed herself and there was no need to make a fuss when
she came. No need to light a fire, no need to shoo the dogs off the chairs. Ann
Rothley bred Jack Russells and all the tapestry sofas at the Hall were covered
in short white hairs.
'I thought Quin would be
back by now,' she said, lifting the famille rose cup and sipping her
coffee appreciatively. Frances might dress like a charwoman, but she kept the
servants up to scratch.
'He was delayed in Vienna,'
said Miss Somerville. 'They gave him an honorary degree and he had to stay on
to see to some business or other.'
Lady Rothley nodded. A
dark, handsome woman in her forties, she did not object to Quin's scholarship.
It happened sometimes in these old families. At Wallington, the Trevelyans were
for ever writing history books.
'Well, I'm afraid you'll
have to break it to him, Frances. I simply had to get rid of that German he
landed me with.
The opera singer from
Dresden. I sent him to the dairy because all the indoor posts were filled and
it's been a disaster. The dairy maid fell in love with him and he was useless
with the cows.'
Miss Somerville nodded. 'A
Jew, I suppose?'
'Well, he said he was, but
he had fair hair. I can't help wondering whether some of them go round
pretending to be Jewish just to get the benefits. The Quakers are giving away
fortunes in relief, I understand. I didn't like to dismiss him, but the cows
are not musical. There's almost nothing I won't do for Quin, but he
must stop trying to get us all to employ these dreadful refugees. Poor Helen -
he made her take a man from Berlin to act as a chauffeur and handyman and as
soon as he's finished work he gets people in and they play chamber music. It's
like lemons in your ears, you know - screech, screech. She's had to tell them
to go and do it in an outhouse. I wish Quin wasn't so concerned about them. I
mean, there are lots of other people to worry about, aren't there? The
unemployed and the coal miners and so on.'
Miss Somerville agreed. 'Of
course one cannot approve of the way Hitler carries on - he really is a very
vulgar man. Not that one likes Jews. When they're rich they're bankers and when
they're poor they're pedlars and in between they play the violin. I'm not
having any of them at Bowmont while I'm in charge and I've told Quin.'
One of the labradors
yawned, jumped down from the chair, and rearranged himself across Miss
Somerville's feet.
'Mind you, if there's a war
we'll get evacuees from London,' said Lady Rothley. She spoke cheerfully and no
one knew what it cost her to do so, for Rollo, her adored eldest son, was
eighteen years old.
'Well, I'd rather have slum
children than foreign refugees. One could keep them separate in the boathouse
on mattresses with rubber sheets and take their food across. Whereas refugees
would… mingle.'
There was a pause while the
ladies sipped and the freshening wind stirred the curtains.
Then: 'Has he said any more
about… you know… the Trust?'
That Ann Rothley, so
forthright and uncompromising, spoke with hesitation was a measure of her
unease.
'Well, I haven't seen him
for months, as you know - he's been in India - but Turton said someone rang up
from their headquarters and said Quin had asked them to send a man up later in
the year. I think he means it, Ann.'
'Oh God!' Would the
desecration never end, she thought wretchedly. Estates sold for building land,
forests felled, townspeople gawping at the houses of one's friends. 'Isn't
there any hope that he will see his duty and marry?'
Miss Somerville shrugged.
'I don't know. Livy saw him at the theatre twice with a girl before he went
abroad, but she didn't think he was serious.'
'He never is serious,' said
Lady Rothley bitterly. 'Anyone would think one married for pleasure.' She was
silent, remembering the horror of her bridal night with Rothley. But she had
not screamed or run away, she had endured it, as later she endured the boredom
of his weekly visits to her bed, looking at the ceiling, thinking of her
embroidery or her dogs. And now there were children and a future. Oak trees
remained unfelled, parkland was tended because girls like her gritted their
teeth. 'It is for England that one marries,' she said. 'For the land.'
'Yes, I know. But what more
can we do?' said Frances wearily. 'You know how many people have tried…'
There was no need to finish
the sentence. Girls of every shape and size had ridden through the gates of
Bowmont on their thoroughbreds, climbed healthily up the turf path with their
tennis rackets, smiled at Quin across dance floors in white organdie, in
spangled tulle…
'You don't think he might be
interested in someone who understood his work?'
'Not a student!' said
Frances, horrified.
'No… but… I don't know;
he's so clever, isn't he?' said Lady Rothley, trying to be tolerant. 'Only, I
can't see a decently brought up girl knowing about old bones, so I suppose it's
no good.' She rose to her feet, re-knotted her scarf. 'Anyway, give the dear
boy my love - but tell him absolutely no more refugees?
Left alone, Miss Somerville
took her secateurs and her trug and went through to the West Terrace, to the sheltered
side of the house away from the sea. For a moment, she paused to look at the
orderly fields stretching away to the blue humpbacks of the Cheviots: the oats
and barley, green and tall, the freshly shorn flock of Leicesters grazing in
the Long Meadow. The new manager Quin had engaged was doing well.
Then she crossed the lawn,
opened a door in the high wall - and entered a different world. The sun ceased
to be merely brightness and became warmth; bumble bees blundered about on the
lavender; the scent of stock and jasmine came to meet her - and a great
quietness as the incessant surge of the sea became the gentlest of whispers.
'I should hope so,' said
Frances firmly to a Tibetan poppy which two days ago had dared to look
doubtful, but now unfurled its petals of heavenly blue.
It was Quin's grandmother,
the meek and silent Jane Somerville, who had made the garden. The daughter of a
wealthy coal owner from County Durham, she brought the consolations of the
Quaker faith to her enforced marriage with the Basher, and she needed them.
Jane had been two years at
Bowmont when, to her own horror and amazement, she rose in the Meeting House at
Berwick and found that she had been moved to speak. 'I am going to make a
garden,' she said. She never again spoke in Meeting, but the next day she gave
orders for the field adjoining the West Lawn to be drained. She travelled to
the other side of England to commandeer the old rose bricks of a recently
demolished manor house; she planted windbreaks, built walls and brought in
lorry loads of loam. The experts told her she was wasting her time; she was too
far north, too close to the sea for the kind of garden she had in mind. The
Basher, on leave from the navy, was furious. He made scenes; he queried every
bill.
Jane, usually so gentle and
acquiescent, took no notice. She sent roses and wisteria and clematis rioting
up the walls; she brought in plants from places far colder and more
inhospitable than Bowmont: camellias and magnolias from
China, poppies and primulas
from the Atlas mountains - and mixed them with the flowers the villagers grew
in their cottage gardens. She set an oak bench against the south wall and
flanked it with buddleias for the butterflies - and decades later, the Basher,
who had fought her all the way, came there to die.
Miss Somerville knelt down
by the Long Border, feeling the now familiar twinge of arthritis in her knee,
and the robin flew down from the branches of the little almond tree to watch.
But presently she dropped the trowel and made her way to the seat beside the
sundial and closed her eyes.
What would happen to this
garden if Quin really gave his house away? Hordes of people tramping through
it, frightening away the robin, shrieking and swatting at the bees. There would
be signposts everywhere - the lower classes never seemed to be able to find
their way. And built against the far wall, where now the peaches ripened in the
sun, two huts. No - one hut divided into two; she had seen it at Frampton. The
lettering at one end would read Ladies, but the other end wouldn't
even spell Gentlemen. Made over entirely to vulgarity, the second
notice would read Gents.
'Oh, God,' prayed Frances
Somerville, addressing her Maker with unaccustomed humility, 'please find her
for me. She must be somewhere - the girl who can save this place!'
It had rained since
daybreak: slanting, cold-looking sheets of rain. Down in the square, the
bedraggled pigeons huddled against Maria Theresia's verdigris skirts. Vienna,
the occupied city, had turned its back on the spring.
Ruth had scarcely slept.
Now she folded the blanket on the camp bed, washed as best she could under the
cloakroom tap, brewed a cup of coffee.
'This is my wedding day,'
she thought. 'This is the day I shall remember when I lie dying -' and felt
panic seize her.
She had put her loden skirt
and woollen sweater under newspaper, weighed down by a tray of fossil-bearing
rocks, but this attempt at home-ironing had not been successful. Should she
after all wear the dress she had bought for Heini's debut with the
Philharmonic? She'd taken it from the flat and it hung now behind the door:
brown velvet with a Puritan collar of heavy cream lace. It came from her
grandfather's department store: the attendants had all come to help her choose;
to share her pleasure in Heini's debut. Now the store had its windows smashed;
notices warned customers not to shop there. Thank heaven her grandfather was
dead.
No, that was Heini's dress
- her page-turning dress, for it mattered what one wore to turn over music. One
had to look nice, but unobtrusive. The dress was the colour of the Bechstein in
the Musikverein - it had nothing to do with an Englishman who ran away from
Strauss.
She wandered through the
galleries and, in the grey light of dawn, her old friends, one by one, became
visible. The polar bear, the elephant seal… the ichthyosaurus with the fake
vertebrae. And the infant aye-aye which she had restored to its case.
'Wish me luck,' she said to
the ugly little beast, leaning her head against the glass.
She closed her eyes and the
primates of Madagascar vanished as she saw the wedding she had planned so often
with her mother. Not here, but on the Grundlsee, rowing across to the little
onion-domed church in a boat - in a whole flotilla of boats, because everyone
she loved would be there. Uncle Mishak would grumble a little because he had to
dress up; Aunt Hilda would get stuck in her zip… and the Zillers would play.
'On the landing stage,' Ruth had suggested, but Biberstein said no, he was too
fat to play on a landing stage. She would wear white organdie and carry a posy
of mountain flowers, and as she walked down the aisle on her father's arm,
there would be Heini with his mop of curls and his sweet smile.
(Oh, Heini, forgive me. I'm
doing this for us.)
Back in the cloakroom, she
looked at her reflection once again. She had never seemed to herself so plain
and unprepossessing. Suddenly she loosened her hair, filled the basin with cold
water, seized the cake of green soap that the museum thought adequate for its
research workers…
Quin, letting himself in
silently, found her ready, her suitcase strapped.
'Does the roof leak?' he
asked, surprised, for from the curving strands of her long hair, drops of water
were running onto the floor.
She shook her head. 'I
washed my hair, but the electric fire doesn't work.'
He saw the shadows under
her eyes, the resolute set of her shoulders.
'Come; it'll be over soon -
and it isn't as bad as going to the dentist.'
At the bottom of the
staircase, as they prepared to leave by the side door, a small group of people
waited to wish her luck. The cleaning lady, the porter, the old taxidermist on
the floor below. They had all known she was there and kept their counsel. She
must remember that when she felt despair about her countrymen.
She had expected something
grand from the British Con-sulate, but the Anschluss had forced a
reorganization of the Diplomatic Service, and the taxi delivered them in front
of a row of temporary huts, on the tin roof of which the rain was still beating
down. A disconsolate plumber in oilskins was poking at an overflowing gutter
with an iron tool. Inside, in the Consul's makeshift office, the picture of
George the Sixth hung slightly askew; out in the corridor someone was
hoovering.
The Consul's deputy was
there, but not in the best of tempers. He had pinkeye, an unpleasant
inflammation of the conjunctiva, and held a handkerchief to his face. Though he
had found Professor Somerville personally courteous, he could not approve of
the way the Consul, presumably on the instruction of the Ambassador, was
rushing this ceremony through. Procedures which should have taken days had been
telescoped into hours: the issuing of visas, the amendment of passports.
Someone, thought the deputy, whose origins were working class, had almost
certainly been at school with someone else. Professor Somerville's father with
the Ambassador's cousin, perhaps… There would have been those exchanges by
which upper-class Englishmen, like dogs round a lamppost, sniff out each
other's schooling - faggings at Eton, beatings at Harrow - and realize that
they are brothers beneath the skin.
'Can I have your documents,
please?'
Quin laid the papers down
on the desk, and saw Ruth's knuckles tighten on the back of her chair. Scarcely
twenty years old, and a child of the new Europe Hitler had made.
'We shall need two
witnesses. Have you brought any?'
'No.'
The deputy sighed and went
out into the corridor. The sound of hoovering ceased and a lady with a large
wart on her chin, wearing a black overall, entered and stood silently by the
door. She had cut a piece out of the sides of her felt slippers to give her
bunions breathing space and this was sensible, Ruth appreciated this, and that
someone whose feet were giving such trouble could not be expected to smile or
say good morning. Then the plumber came, divested of his oilskins, and smelling
strongly - and again this was entirely natural - of the drains he had been
trying to clean and it was clear that he too was not pleased to be interrupted
in his work - why should he be?
The Consul himself now
entered, distinguished-looking, formally suited, with his finger in the Book of
Common Prayer, and the ceremony began.
Quin had not expected what
came next. 'It'll just be a formality,' he'd promised Ruth. 'A few minutes and
then it'll be done.' But though the Consul was using a truncated version of the
marriage service, he was still pronouncing the words that had joined men and
women for four hundred years - and Quin, foreseeing trouble, frowned and stared
at the floor.
'Dearly beloved, we are
gathered together here in the sight of God to join this Man and this Woman in
holy Matrimony …'
Beside him, Ruth moved
uneasily. The lady with the cut-out bedroom slippers sniffed.
'… and therefore is not
by any to be enterprised, nor taken in hand unadvisedly, lightly or wantonly…
but reverently, discreetly, advisedly, soberly…'
It was as he had expected. Ruth
made a sudden, panicky movement of her head and a last drop of water fell from
her wet hair onto the bare linoleum.
The Consul listed the
causes for which matrimony was ordained. The procreation of children brought an
anxious frown to her brow; the remedy against sin worried her less.
It was only briefly that
the plumber and the cleaning lady, neither of whom understood a word, were
required to disclose any impediment to the marriage or for ever hold their
peace and the Consul came to the point.
'Quinton Alexander St John,
wilt thou have this Woman to thy wedded Wife… ? Wilt thou love her, comfort
her, honour, and keep her in sickness and in health; and, forsaking all other,
keep thee only unto her, so long as ye both shall live?'
'I will.'
'Ruth Sidonie, will thou
have this Man to they wedded Husband…'
Her 'I will' came
clearly, but with the faint, forgotten accent of Aberdeen. A stress symptom, it
would appear.
The Consul cleared his
throat. 'Do you have a ring?'
Ruth shook her head in the
same instant as Quin took from his pocket a plain gold band.
He too was pale as he
promised to take Ruth for his wedded wife from this day forward, for better for
worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health. The ring, when he
slipped it on her finger, was a perfect fit. Her hands were as cold as ice.
With this Ring I thee wed,
with my Body I thee worship, and with all my worldly Goods I thee endow.' His voice was
steady now. The thing was almost done.
'We will omit the prayer,'
said the Consul and allowed the final injunction to roll off his tongue with a
suitable and sombre emphasis. 'Those whom God hath joined together let no
man put asunder.'
It was over. The register
was signed, Quin paid his dues, tipped the witnesses, put a note into the
collecting box for orphans of the Spanish Civil War.
'If you come back at four
o'clock your passport will be ready with your wife's name on it, and her visa.'
Ruth managed to reach the
gravelled driveway before she burst into tears.
'For God's sake, Ruth,
what's the matter? It's all over now. Tomorrow evening you'll be with your
family.'
She blew her nose, shook
out her hair.
'You see, we shall be
cursed!'
'Cursed! What on earth are
you talking about? Gould we have less of the Old Testament, please?'
'Ha! You see… Now you are
also anti-Semitic'
'Well, I do think this
might be the moment to take after the goat-herding grandmother rather than some
gloomy old rabbi. What do you mean, we shall be cursed?'
'Because of the words.
Because we said those words before witnesses. I didn't think the words would be
so strong. And you shouldn't have said that about with my worldly
goods I thee endow because even if we were going to do the worshipping with the
body, there would still be Morgan.'
'Ah, Morgan. I thought we
hadn't heard the last of him. Look, Ruth, it doesn't become you, this kind of
fuss. You know what Hitler is like, you know what had to be done.' 'I should
have escaped over the border; I should not have let you swear things that are
lies.'
Quin too was very weary. It
was with difficulty that he repressed his views on her ascent of the
Kanderspitze.
'Come, we'll go to the
Imperial and have two whopping schnitzels. Because one thing you'll find it
hard to come by in London is a decent piece of frying veal.'
'I can't go in these old
clothes. And if I'm seen…' Quin's arrogance was quite unconscious. 'Nothing can
happen to you now. You are a British subject - and in my care.'
The schnitzels were a
success. When they left the restaurant, her hair was dry and enveloped her in a
manner that was disorganized, but cheerful. He had already gathered that it was
a kind of barometer, like seaweed.
'We've still got three
hours left. Where would you like to go on your last afternoon in Vienna?'
To his surprise, she
suggested they take a tram to the Danube. He knew how little the wide, grey
river, looping round the industrial suburbs of the city, actually concerned the
Viennese. Gloomy Johann Strauss, with his dyed moustaches and inability to
smile, might have written the world's most famous waltz in tribute to the
river, but the Danube's vicious flooding had compelled the inhabitants,
centuries ago, to turn their backs on it.
But when they stood on the
Reich Bridge, it was clear that Ruth was on a pilgrimage.
'Do you see that little bay
over there, just by the warehouse?'
He nodded.
'Well, my Uncle Mishak used
to fish there - only he's my great-uncle really. That was years and years ago.
Imagine it, the Kaiser was still on his throne and Austria and Hungary were
joined up. One could take a barge down to Budapest -no passport, no
restrictions. Anyway, Uncle Mishak had joined my grandfather in his department
store, but he loved the open air and every Sunday he went fishing. Only on this
particular Sunday, instead of a fish, he caught a bottle!' She turned to Quin,
full of narrative self-importance. 'It was a lemonade bottle and inside it was
a message!'
Quin was impressed, knowing
how rarely messages in bottles are ever read.
'It said: My name is
Marianne Stichter, I am twenty-four years old and I am very sad. If you are a
kind and good man, please come and fetch me. And she'd put the address of
the school where she taught. It was in a village on the river near Dürnstein -
you know, where Richard the Lionheart was imprisoned.'
'Go on.'
'The school was run by her
father and he was a sadist and a bully. There was an elder sister who'd married
and escaped, but Marianne was quiet and plain and shy, and she had a stammer,
and he'd made her teach the junior class. Of course, the children all imitated
her - every time she entered the classroom, she just wanted to die.'
Ruth paused and looked at
Quin, savouring, on his behalf, what was to follow.
'Then one day she was
giving a Geography lesson on the rivers of South America when the door opened
and a small man in a dark suit and homburg hat came in, carrying a briefcase.
'The children started
tittering but she didn't even hear them, she just stood and looked at the
little man. Then my Uncle Mishak took off his hat - he was pretty bald by then,
and he wore gold pince-nez, and he said: "Are you Fraulein Stichter?"
He wasn't really asking, he knew, but he waited till she nodded and then he
said: "I have come to fetch you." Just like that. "I have come
to fetch you." And he opened his briefcase and took out the note from the
bottle.' 'And she came?'
Ruth smiled and parted her
hair with her fingers so that she could narrate unimpeded. 'She didn't say
anything. Not a word. She picked up the duster and very carefully she wiped off
the rivers of South America - the Negro and the Madeira and the Amazon. Then
she put the chalk back into the box and opened a cupboard and took out her hat
and put it on. The children had stopped tittering and started gawping, but she
walked down between the desk and she didn't even see them; they didn't exist.
At the door, Uncle Mishak gave her his arm - he didn't come much above her
shoulder - and they walked across the play yard and down the road and got on
the paddle boat for Vienna- and no one there ever saw them again!'
'And they were happy?'
Ruth put a hand up to her
eyes. 'Ridiculously so. People laughed at them - plumping each other's
cushions, pulling out footstools. When she died he tried to die too, but he
couldn't manage it. That's when my mother made him come to us.'
Back in the Inner City,
Ruth pointed out the balcony on which she had stood stark naked at midnight, at
the age of nine, hoping that pneumonia would release her from disgrace and
ruin.
'It was my great-aunt's
flat and I'd just heard that I only got Commended instead of Highly Commended
in my music exam. Oh, and look, here's the actual bench where my mother was
overcome by pigeons and my father rescued her.'
'There seem to have been a
lot of happy marriages in your family,' said Quin.
'I don't know… Uncle Mishak
was happy, and my parents… but in general I don't think they thought of it as
something that made you happy.'
'What then?'
Ruth was frowning. One ear
turned colour slightly as she strangled it in a loop of hair. 'It was what you
did… because you had set out to do it. It was… work; it was like ploughing a
field or painting a picture - you kept on adding colours or trying to get the
perspective right. The women in particular. My Aunt Miriam's husband was
unfaithful and she kept ringing my mother and saying she was going to kill him,
but when people suggested divorce she was terribly shocked.' She looked up, her
hand flew to her mouth. 'I'm terribly sorry… I don't mean us, of course. These
were proper marriages, not ones with Morgan.'
Their last visit was to St
Stephan's Cathedral, the city's symbol and its heart.
'I'd like to light a
candle,' said Ruth, and he let her go alone up the sombre, incense-scented
nave.
Waiting at the door, he saw
across the square two terrified fair-haired boys with broad peasant faces being
dragged towards an army truck by a group of soldiers.
'They're rounding up all
the Social Democrats,' said a plump, middle-aged woman with a feather in her
hat. There was no censure in her voice; no emotion in the round, pale eyes.
Making his way to where
Ruth knelt, determined to take her out by a side door, Quin found that she had
lit not one candle but two. No need to ask for whom - all roads led to Heini
for this girl.
'Shall I ever come back, do
you think?'
Quin made no answer.
Whether Ruth would return to this doomed city, he did not know, but he and his
like would surely do so, for he did not see how this evil could be halted by
anything but war.
Heini had been ten days in
Budapest. It was good to be back in his native city; good to walk along the
Corso beside the river and look up at the castle on Buda hill; good to see the
steamers glide past on their way to the Black Sea and to taste again the fiery gulyas
which the Viennese thought they could make, but couldn't. There was a fizz, an
edge of wit here that was missing in the Austrian capital, and the women were
the most beautiful in the world. Not that Heini was tempted -he was finding it
all too easy to be faithful to Ruth; and anyway one always had to be careful of
disease.
His father still lived in
the yellow villa on the Hill of the Roses; the apple trees in the garden were
in blossom; they took their meals on the verandah looking down over the Pasha's
tomb and the wooded slopes on to the Gothic tracery of the Houses of Parliament
and the gables and roofs of Pest.
Heini did not care for his
stepmother; she lacked soul, but with his father still editing the only liberal
German newspaper in the city, he had to be glad that there was somebody to care
for him.
Nor was there any problem
about securing a visa for entry into Great Britain. Hungary was still
independent, there was no stampede to leave the country; the quota was not yet
full. It would take a little longer than he expected - a few weeks - but there
was nothing to feel anxious about.
Best of all, Heini's old
Professor of Piano Studies at the Academy had managed to arrange a concert for
him.
'I'd have liked to organize
something big for you in the Vigado,' Professor Sandor said, mentioning the
famous concert hall in which Rubinstein had played and Brahms conducted, 'but
it's too short notice - and who knows, if you play here in the Academy, Bartok
may come and that could lead to something.'
Heini had been properly
grateful. He remembered the old building with affection; its tradition
stretching back to Liszt and boasting now, in Bartok and Kodaly and Dohnanyi,
as distinguished a group of professors as any music school in the world. It was
to be an evening recital in the main hall; he was to get half the proceeds; all
in all, Professor Sandor had been most helpful and generous.
But there was a snag. The
Concert Committee had asked Heini to include in his programme the sonata that
the third -year piano students were studying that term: Beethoven's tricky and
beautiful Opus 99. Heini had no objection to this, but though he had the last
ten Beethoven sonatas by heart, this one he would have to play from the score -
and that meant a page turner.
It was here that things had
begun to go wrong. For Professor Sandor had a daughter, also a piano student,
whom he had offered Heini in that role.
'You'll find her very
intelligent,' the Professor had said proudly; and at Heini's first rehearsal
Mali had duly appeared - and been a disaster.
Mali was not just plain -
an unobtrusively plain girl would not have upset him - she was virulently ugly;
her spectacles glinted and caught the light; she had buck teeth. Not only that,
but she drove him nearly mad with her humble eagerness, her desperate desire to
be of use, and though she could hardly fail to be able to read music, she was
so hesitant, so terrified of being hasty, that several times he had had to nod
at the bottom of the page. Worst of all, Mali perspired.
Heini had missed Ruth ever
since he had come to Budapest, but in the days leading up to the concert his
longing for her became a constant ache. Ruth turned over so gracefully, so
skilfully that one hardly knew she was there; she smelled sweetly and faintly
of lavender shampoo and never, in the years she'd sat beside him, had he found
it necessary to nod.
Nor was his stepmother at
all aware of the kind of pressures that playing in public put on him. Heini's hands
were insured, of course, and taking care of them had become second nature, but
a pianist used all his body and when he tripped over a dustpan she had left on
the stairs, he could not help being upset.
'I'm not being fussy,' he
said to Marta, 'but if I sprained my ankle, I wouldn't be able to pedal for a
month.'
It had been so different in
the Bergers' apartment, which had become his second home. Not only Ruth but her
mother and the maids were happy to serve him, as he in turn served music.
But it was on the actual
day of the concert that Heini's need for Ruth became almost uncontainable.
The day began badly, when
he was woken at nine o'clock by the sound of the maid hoovering the corridor
outside his room. He always slept late on the day of a concert, but when he
complained, his stepmother said that the girl had to get through her work and
pointed out that Heini had already spent ten hours in bed.
'In bed, but not asleep,'
Heini said bitterly - but he didn't really expect her to understand.
Then there was the question
of lunch. Heini could never eat anything heavy before he played and in Vienna
Ruth always made a point of getting to the Cafe Museum early to keep a corner
table and make sure that the beef broth, which was all that he could swallow,
was properly strained and the plain rusks well baked. Whereas Marta seemed to
expect him to play on a diet of roast pork and dumplings!
Leaving the house earlier
than he had intended, Heini, walking down the fashionable Vaci utca, faced yet
another challenge: the purchase of a flower for his buttonhole. A gardenia was
probably too formal for the Academy, a camellia too, but a carnation, a white
one, should strike the right note. Ruth, of course, had bought his buttonholes
- he had watched her once, searching for a flawless bloom, involving the shop
assistant, who knew her well, in the excitement of kitting him out.
Bravely now, Heini went in
alone and found a girl to help him. It was only when he came out again, his
flower safe in cellophane, that he realized that he did not have a pin.
In the hall of the Academy,
Professor Sandor was waiting.
'It's an excellent
attendance - almost full. Considering we had less than two weeks for the
publicity and there's a premiere at the opera, we can be very pleased.'
Heini nodded and went to
the green-room - and there was Mali in an unbelievably ugly dress: crimson
crepe which clung unsuitably to her bosom and exposed her collar bones. The
splash of colour would distract the eye even from the back of the hall. Ruth
always chose dresses that blended with the colours of the hall, quiet dresses
which nevertheless became her wonderfully.
'Do you have a pin?' he
asked - and Mali did at least have that and managed, fumbling and nervous, to
fasten the carnation in his buttonhole. 'I shall need to be quiet now,' he
added firmly, and sat down as far away from her as possible.
Not that this ensured him
the peace he craved. Mali fidgeted incessantly with the Beethoven sonatas,
checking the pages; she cleared her throat… '-"
Ruth knew exactly how to
quieten him during those last moments before a concert or an exam. She brought
along a set of dominos and they played for a while, or she just sat silently
with her hands folded and that marvellous hair of hers bright and burnished,
but taken back with a velvet band so that it didn't tumble forward and distract
the audience. Ruth made sure he had fresh lemonade waiting for him in the
interval; he never had to think about his music, it was always there and in the
right order. And now, glancing in the mirror, he saw that his carnation was
listing quite noticeably towards the left!
'Five minutes,' called the
page, knocking on the door.
'My handkerchief!' said
Heini suddenly in a panic. The white one in the pocket of his dinner jacket was
there, of course, but the other one, the one with which he wiped his hands
between the pieces…
Mali flushed and jumped to
her feet. 'I'm sorry… I didn't know that I…'
'It doesn't matter.' He
found the one his stepmother had washed for him, but cotton, not linen. The
Bergers' maids always laundered his handkerchiefs; they smelled so fresh and
clean with just the lightest touch of starch: Ruth saw to that.
It was time to go.
Professor Sandor put his head round the door. 'Bartok is here!' he said,
beaming- and Heini rose.
The applause which greeted
him was loud and enthusiastic for Heini Radek was an amazingly personable young
man with his dark curls, his graceful body. This was how a pianist should look
and in Liszt's city comparisons were not hard to make.
Heini bowed, smiled at a
girl in the front row, again up at the gallery, gave a respectful nod in the
direction of Hungary's greatest composer. Turning to settle himself on the
piano stool he found that Mali, her Adam's apple working, was leaning forward
in her chair. He had told her again and again that she had to sit back, that
the audience must not be aware of any figure but his, and she jerked backwards.
It was unbelievable - how could anyone be so gauche? And she had drenched
herself with some appalling sickly scent beneath which the odour of sweat was
still discernible.
But now there had to be
only the music. He closed his eyes for a moment of concentration, opened them
-and began to play.
And Professor Sandor, who
had slipped into the front row, nodded, for the boy in spite of all was very,
very musical and the persuasion, the work, he had put into arranging the
concert had been worthwhile.
It was after three encores,
after the applause and the flowers thrown onto the platform by an excited group
of schoolgirls, that Heini thought of Ruth again. She always waited for him
wherever he played - unobtrusive, quiet, but so very pretty, standing close by
so that he could smile at her and claim her, but never crowding in when people
wanted to tell him how much they had enjoyed the music. And afterwards she
would take him back to the Felsengasse and Leonie would have his favourite
dishes on the table, and they would talk about the concert and relive the
evening till he was relaxed enough to sleep. Or if he was invited to a party,
to people who might be useful to him, Ruth slipped quietly away without a word
of reproach.
Whereas Mali now was
waiting for praise, her eyes worried behind her spectacles. 'Was it all right?'
she asked breathlessly. 'Everything was all right, wasn't it?'
'Yes, yes,' he said,
managing to smile, and then returned to greet his well-wishers, and to receive
their volatile greetings, so different from the well-bred handshakes and heel
clicks of the Viennese.
But late that night,
returning home, he realized again how bereft he was. That his father would be
working late in his editorial office he knew, but his stepmother too had gone
out. True she had left a note and a pot of goulash on the stove, but Heini had
never had to return to an empty house.
He was out on the moonlit
verandah when his father came through the French windows carrying two glasses
of wine. 'How did it go?' 'Pretty well, I think.'
'I've heard good things
already on the grapevine. You'll go far, Heini.'
Heini smiled and took his
glass. 'I miss Ruth,' he said. 'Yes, I can imagine,' said his father, who had
met Ruth in Vienna. 'If I were you, I'd marry her quickly before someone else
snaps her up!'
'Oh, they won't do that. We
belong.' Beside him, Radek was silent, looking down at the lights of the city
in which he had lived all his life. A man of fifty, he looked older than his
age and troubled. 'How's it going with your visa?' 'All right, as far as I
know.'
'Well, don't delay, Heini.
I don't like the way things are shaping. If Hitler moves against the Czechs,
the Hungarians will try and get a share of the pickings and that means
kowtowing to the Germans. There aren't any laws against the Jews yet, but
they'll come.' And abruptly: 'I've taken a job in Switzerland. Marta is going
ahead next week to find us an apartment.'
Left alone again, Heini was
filled with disquiet. For his father to leave his home and the prestige he
enjoyed in Hungary meant there was danger indeed. Heini did not like the idea
of England: The Land Without Music, the country of fogs and men in
bowler hats who had done unmentionable things to each other at boarding school,
but it looked as though he had better get himself there quickly. And he was
going to Ruth, his starling, his page turner, his love. Humbly, Heini, staring
down at the lights of a barge as it slipped beneath the Elisabeth Bridge,
admitted that he had taken Ruth too much for granted. Well, all this was going
to change. Not only would he make Ruth wholly his, physically as well as
mentally, but he was ready - yes, he was almost ready now - to marry her. At
twenty-one he was very young to be taking such a step and his agent in Vienna
had advised against it. So much patronage at the start of a musician's career
came from wealthy matrons and they were apt to look with a particular kindness
on unmarried youths. But this did not matter. He was prepared to make the
sacrifice.
On an impulse, he fetched a
piece of paper and, lighting the lamp in the corner of the verandah, sat down
to write a letter. He told Ruth of the concert and the disaster Mali had been,
and wrote movingly and without hesitation of his love. Knowing, though, how
practical Ruth was, how she needed to help, he wrote also of what he wanted her
to do.
I shall have to have a
piano as soon as I arrive, darling, wrote Heini. / don't
of course expect you to buy one - I know money may be a little tight till your
family gets settled — only to rent one. A baby grand would be ideal, but if
your parents' drawing room won't accommodate that, I'll make do with an upright
for the time being. A Bosendorfer would be best, you know how I prefer them,
but I'll be quite happy with a Steinway or a Bechstein, but if it's a Bechstein
it must be a Model 8, not any of the smaller ones. Perhaps you'd better leave
the tuning till the day before I come — and not an English piano, Ruth, not
even a Broadwood. I'm sure I can leave it all to you, my love; you've never
failed me yet and you never will.
When he had signed the
letter, Heini still lingered for a while, inhaling the scent of mignonette from
the garden. 'I love you, Ruth,' he said aloud, and felt uplifted and purged and
good as people do when they have committed themselves to another. He
would have stayed longer, but for the whine of a mosquito somewhere above him.
Once, on the Grundlsee, a midge had bitten him on the pad of his index finger
and it had turned septic. Hurrying indoors, Heini closed the window and then
went to bed.
It was not until she stood
on the platform and looked up at the royal-blue coaches with their crests and
the words Com-pagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits painted over the
windows, that Ruth realized they were travelling on the Orient Express.
Now, sitting opposite Quin
in the dining car as the train streamed through the twilit Austrian
countryside, she looked about her in amazement. She had expected luxury, but
the Lalique panels, the rosewood marquetry of the partitions, the gilded metal
flowers on the ceiling were sumptuous beyond belief. On the damask-covered
table lay napkins folded into butterflies; a row of crystal glasses stood
beside each plate; sprays of poinsettias, like crimson shields, glowed in the
light of the lamp.
'Oh, I can't believe this,'
said Ruth, trying to feel guilty and not succeeding. 'It's like a real and
proper honeymoon. You shouldn't have done it.'
'It was no trouble,' said
Quin, handing her the menu sheet.
But in fact the bribing and
manoeuvring to get a compartment at such notice had been considerable. He'd
done it, wanting to give her an interval of comfort between the days of hiding
in the museum and the poverty which awaited her in London, and now, as she bent
over the gold-lettered menu, he summoned the waiter and instructed him to pull
down the blinds, for they were approaching the familiar country round her
beloved Grundlsee.
'I ought to be a Hungarian
countess,' said Ruth, looking round at the other diners. 'Or at least a spy.'
She had taken one look at the people getting onto the train and unpacked the
page-turning frock. Even so, she felt badly underdressed - whereas Quin, in the
mysterious way of Englishmen who return from the wilds, was immaculate in his
dinner jacket. 'Look at that woman's stole - it's a sable!' she said under her
breath.
'I dare say she'd swop with
you,' said Quin, glancing at their middle-aged neighbour with her heavily
painted face.
'Because I'm with you, do
you mean?'
'No, not because of that,'
said Quin, but he did not elaborate.
'Do you think you might
help me to order?' asked Ruth presently. 'There seems to be so much.''
'I was hoping you would
suggest that,' said Quin. 'You see, I think we should pay particular attention
to the wine.'
The wine, when it came, was
presented by the sommelier who undid its napkin and held it out to Quin rather
in the manner of a devoted midwife showing the head of a ducal household that
he really has his longed-for son.
'Try it,' said Quin,
exchanging a look of complicity with the waiter.
Ruth picked up her glass…
sipped… closed her eyes… sipped again… opened them. For a moment it looked as
though she was going to speak - to make an assessment, a comparison. But she
didn't. She just shook her head once, wonderingly - and then she smiled.
All Ruth's acquaintances in
Vienna knew that she could be silenced by music. It fell to Quinton Somerville,
proffering a Pouilly-Fuisse, Vieux, to discover that she could be silenced too
by wine.
'You know, I shall be sorry
to relinquish your education,' he said. 'You're a natural.'
'But we can still be
friends, can't we? Later, I mean, after the divorce?'
Quin did not answer. The
wine seemed to have gone to Ruth's hair rather than her head: the golden locks
shone and glinted, tendrils curved round the collar of her dress - one had come
to rest in a whorl above her left breast -* and her eyes were soft with dreams.
Quin had friends, but they did not really look like that.
Ruth's vol-au-vents
arrived: tiny, feather-light, filled with foie gras and oysters, and she had
time only to eat and marvel and throw an occasional admiring glance at Quin,
despatching with neat-fingered panache his flambeed crayfish. It was not until
the plates were cleared and the finger bowls brought that she said: 'About our
wedding… about being married…'
'Yes?'
'Would you mind if we
didn't tell anyone about it? No one at all?'
Quin put down his glass.
'No, not in the least; in fact I'd prefer it; I hate fusses.' But he was
surprised: the Bergers seemed a family singularly unsuited to secrets. 'Will
you be able to keep it from your parents?'
'Yes, I think so. Later I
suppose they'll find out because I'll have my own passport and it'll be
British, but we'd be divorced by then.' She hesitated, wondering whether to say
more. 'You see, they're very old-fashioned and they might find it difficult to
understand that a marriage could mean absolutely nothing. And I couldn't bear
it if they tried to… make you…' She shook her head and began again. 'They've
been very good to Heini; he practically lived with us, but I don't think they
altogether understand about him… my mother in particular. She might think that
you… that we…'
No, she couldn't explain to
Quin how she dreaded her parents' approval of this marriage, the gratitude
which would embarrass him and make him feel trapped. To make Quin feel that he
was still part of her life in any way after they landed would be an appalling
return for his kindness.
The sommelier returned,
beaming at Ruth as at a gifted pupil who has passed out of her confirmation
class with honours. The wine list was produced again and consulted, and it was
with regret that he and Quin agreed that in view of mademoiselle's youth it
would be unwise to proceed to the Margaux he would otherwise have recommended with
the guinea fowl.
'But there is a Tokay for
the dessert, monsieur - an Essencia 1905 which is something special, je
vous assure.'
'Is this how you live in
your home?' asked Ruth when her new friend had gone. 'Do you have a marvellous
cook and a splendid wine cellar and all that?'
He shook his head. 'I have
a cellar, but my home is not in the least like this. It's on a cold cliff by a
grey sea in the most northern county in England - if you go any further you
bump into Scotland.'
'Oh.' It did not sound very
inviting. 'And who lives in it when you aren't there? Does it stand empty?'
'I have an old aunt who
looks after it for me. Or rather she's a second cousin but I've always called
her aunt and she's a very aunt-like person. My parents died when I was small and
then my grandfather, and she came to keep house after that. I'm greatly
beholden to her because it means I can be away as much as I want and know that
everything runs smoothly.'
'Were you fond of her as a
child?'
'She left me alone,' said
Quin.
Ruth frowned, trying to
embrace this concept. No one had ever left her alone - certainly not her mother
or her father or her Aunt Hilda or the maids… Not even Uncle Mishak, teaching
her the names of the plants. And as for Heini…
'Did you like that?' she
asked. 'Being left alone, I mean?'
Quin smiled. 'It's rather a
British thing,' he said. 'We seem to like it on the whole. But don't trouble
yourself- I don't think it would suit you.'
'No, I don't think it
would. Miss Kenmore - my Scottish governess, do you remember her? - she was
very fond of Milton and she taught me that sonnet where you do-nothing. The
last line is very famous and sad. They also serve mho only stand and wait.
I'm not very good at that.'
The dessert came - a souffle
au citron - and with it the Tokay in a glass as graceful as a lily… And
presently a bowl of fresh fruit straight out of a Flemish still life, and
chocolate truffles… and coffee as black as night.
'Oh, this is like heaven!
If I was very rich I think I would spend my life travelling the world in a
train and never get there. Never arrive, just keep on and on!'
'It's a dream many people
have,' said Quin, opening a walnut for her and inspecting it carefully before
he put it on her plate. 'Arriving means living and living is hard work.'
'Even for you?'
'For everyone.'
Ruth looked up, wondering
what could be difficult for a man so independent, so successful, the citizen of
a free and mighty land. 'It's odd, even before the horror… before the Nazis,
people used to say to me, oh, you're young and healthy, you can't have any
problems, but sometimes I did. It seems silly now when all one hopes for is to
be alive. But you know… with Heini… I love him so much, I want to serve him,
not by standing and waiting but by doing things. But sometimes I didn't get it
right.'
'In what way?'
'Well, Heini is a musician.
He has to practise most of the day and he likes me to be there. But I love
being out of doors… everybody does, I suppose, only you can't play the piano
out of doors - not unless you're in the Prater All Girls Band,' she glanced
reproachfully at Quin who grinned back, unrepentant, 'and Heini isn't. So
sometimes I used to get very resentful sitting there hour after hour with the
windows tight shut because draughts are bad for pianos. It seems awful to think
of now when I realize how lucky I was and that all of us were safe. Do you
think we shall go back to being petty like that if the world becomes normal
again?'
'If it is petty to want to
be in the fresh air, then yes, I'm afraid we will,' said Quin.
But now it could not be
postponed much longer, for the diners were leaving; the waiters were bowing
them out and pocketing their tips - and it became necessary for Ruth to face
that technically she was on honeymoon with Professor Quinton Somerville and must
now go to bed.
'I'll stay in the bar for a
while and smoke my pipe,' said Quin, and she rose and made her way down the
train, through the dimly lit and silent corridors of the wagon-lits, and into
Compartment Number Twenty-Three.
It was no good pretending
that this bore the slightest resemblance to the kind of sleeping cubicles she
had travelled in previously with their two bunks and narrow ladder. There was
no question of climbing up and out of sight till morning, for confronting her
were two undoubted beds, separated only by a strip of carpet. Had this been a
proper honeymoon, she would have been able to stretch out her hand and hold her
husband's in the night. And the steward had been busy. Quin's pyjamas, her own
shamingly girlish cotton nightdress, were laid out on the monogrammed pillows
and, above the marble wash basin, his shaving brush and safety razor rested
beside her toothbrush in a manner that was disconcertingly connubial. '
In other ways, though, the
compartment was more like Aladdin's cave: the snow-white triangle of the turned
down sheets, the pink-shaded lights throwing a glow on the dark panelling…
Carafes of fluted glass held drinking water; a bunch of black grapes lay in a
chased silver bowl.
She undressed, put on the
nightdress she had packed for her ascent of the Kanderspitze - and for a
lusting moment imagined herself in eau-de-nil silk pyjamas piped in black. No
one would have seen them; she would have stayed entirely under the
bedclothes, but she would have known that they were there.
Safely in bed, she turned
off the lights to give Quin privacy, turned them on again so that he wouldn't
fall over things - and found that in this marvellous train there was a third
alternative - a dimmer switch which caused the room to be filled with a soft,
faint radiance like the light inside the petals of a rose.
When Quin came she would
roll over to face the wall and pretend to be asleep, but as the train raced
through the night, her tired brain threw up images of bridal nights throughout
the ages… Of virgins brought to the beds of foreign kings, inserted in
four-posters as big as houses to await bridegrooms seen only once in cloth of
gold… The Mi-Mi had communal wedding nights; old ladies sang outside the hut of
the married couple, young people danced and called encouragement through the
wooden slats… And those poor Victorian girls in novels, told the facts of life
too late or not at all, who tried to climb up window curtains or hide in
wardrobes…
Would she have been looking
for wardrobes if this had been a proper wedding night? At least she knew the
facts of life - had known them since she was six years old. Now, moving
restlessly between the sheets, Ruth wondered if she had pursued her studies a
bit too zealously, there on the Grundlsee. Kraft-Ebbing, Havelock Ellis,
Sigmund Freud… There was so much that could go wrong, all the gentlemen had
agreed on that. Frigidity, for example. Ruth had been particularly alarmed
about frigidity, being a child who even then preferred fire to ice. But
probably that wouldn't have happened here… not with someone who could always
make her laugh.
It was an hour since she
had left the dining car. Turning over, she closed her eyes and feigned sleep -
but another hour passed, and another, and still he did not come.
She slept at last, only to
be woken by a sudden jolt. The train had stopped, footsteps were heard outside,
voices raised.
She was instantly
terrified. It had happened. She was going to be taken off the train and turned
back, as she had been turned back before. The bed beside hers was still empty.
Unthinking, desperate, she ran out into the corridor.
Quin was standing by the
window. He had pulled up the blind and was looking out at the moonlit landscape
- and his pipe, for once, was actually alight.
'They're coming!' she
cried. 'Oh, God, I knew it would go wrong! They're going to send me back!'
He turned and saw her,
half-asleep still, but terribly afraid, and without thought he opened his arms
as she, equally without thought, ran into them.
'Hush,' he said, holding
her, manoeuvring so as to lay his pipe on the narrow windowsill. 'It's
perfectly all right. There's something on the line, that's all. A cow,
perhaps.'
'A cow?' She blinked up at
him, made a negative, despairing movement of the head.
'One of those fat piebald
ones, the kind you get on chocolate wrappers. Milk chocolate, of course;
they're very good milkers, piebald cows.' He went on talking nonsense till the
shivering grew less. Then: 'We're over the border,' he said. 'We're absolutely
safe. We're in France.'
But she still couldn't
believe it. 'Really?' she said, lifting her face to his. 'You're telling me the
truth? But how did we get across - no one came to search us. Usually they come
and - ' She started to shiver again, knowing the brutality the border guards
had shown to other refugees; the way they confiscated at the last minute even
the few treasures they had been able to take.
'I left our passport with
the chef du train - the border's only a formality for us.'
Our passport… The
passport in which His Britannic Majesty's Secretary of State requested and
required those whom it concerned to let the bearer pass without let or
hindrance… For a moment, Ruth wanted nothing except to belong to this man and
his world. With Quin, and those who protected him, one would always be safe.
She would even live in a cold house on a northern cliff for that; even endure
being left alone by his aunt.
Then, as the terror
receded, she became aware that she stood in his arms in the corridor of a train
in nothing but her nightdress - and not a suitable nightdress, a childish
cotton one with a crumpled ribbon. That she had thrown herself at him and been
entirely unashamed when all she owed him for ever and ever was to absent
herself, to not make demands on him or claim even another minute of his time.
Probably he thought - Oh God, surely not…
'I'm sorry, I've been an
idiot,' she said pulling roughly away. 'You must think -'
'I don't think anything,'
he said, but her fierce withdrawal had made him angry. Did she really think he
would take advantage of her - a girl scarcely out of the schoolroom? Hadn't he
made it entirely clear what this marriage was about? 'You'd better get back to
bed,' he said abruptly - and she saw confirmation of her fears in his set face,
and hurried back to the compartment and shut the door.
When she woke in the
morning, he was lying fully dressed on the bed with his arms behind his head
and his eyes open as he watched the rising sun.
They reached Calais two
hours later. Seagulls wheeled above them, porters shouted on the quayside,
cranes swung over their heads. This was a clean, white world, as different as
could be from the enclosed luxury of the train.
'I'm really beginning to
believe we'll get there,' said Ruth.
'Of course we'll get
there.'
They went on board. Even
for the short Channel crossing he had secured a cabin. 'You'll need another
sweater,' he said, lifting her suitcase onto the rack. 'It'll be cold on deck
and you'll have to pay your respects to the White Cliffs of Dover.'
She nodded and opened the
case. On top, carefully packed, was a framed photograph which she had taken
from the flat, kept in the museum… even packed, wrapped in her nightdress, in
the rucksack with which she proposed to swim into France. Deliberately, she
took it out and placed it in Quin's hands. Here was the chance to show him how
committed she was to someone else; to make him see that she would never again
forget herself as she had done the previous night.
'That's Heini.'
Quin did not doubt it. The
photo, taken on the day of his graduation from the Conservatoire, was in colour
and emphasized Heini's dark curls, his light grey, long-lashed eyes. He stood
beside a Bosendorfer grand, one hand resting on the lid, and he was smiling.
Across the right-hand corner of the picture, in large, spiky Gothic script,
were the words: To my little starling, with fondest love, Heini.
'How do starlings come into
it?' Quin wanted to know, remembering the distress that mention of
these robust birds had caused her in the flat.
Ruth explained. 'Mozart had
one. He bought it in the market for thirty-four kreutzers and he kept it in a
cage in his room. It used to sing and sing but however loud it sang it never
bothered him…' She told the story, her face alight, for she never forgot that
first time when Heini had claimed her.
Quin listened politely.
'And what happened to it?' he asked when she had finished. 'It died,' Ruth
admitted. 'It would,' commented Quin.
'What do you mean?'
'Well, they're not cage
birds, are they? Perhaps Mozart didn't know that?'
'Mozart knew everything,''
she flashed.
Quin grinned and left her.
She put on an extra sweater and made her way onto the deck. As she emerged from
the First-Class Lounge, she saw two fur-clad and unmistakably upper-class
ladies, settled for sea sickness in reclining steamer chairs.
'Wasn't that Quin
Somerville?' said one.
'Was it? I didn't see.'
'I'm pretty sure it was.
That crinkly face… so attractive. I thought I saw him on the platform with a
girl. One of those little peasants in a loden cape.'
'Goodness! Could he be
serious?'
'I wouldn't have thought
so, she hardly seemed his style. Not nearly soignee enough.'
A steward passed and the
ladies demanded rugs.
'If he « serious, poor
Lavinia will go into a decline. She still thinks she's going to get him for
Fenella.'
'Well, you can't blame her.
All that money and - '
Ruth drew back and went out
by a different door. Quin was standing in the bows, his hair blown by the wind,
absorbed in the pattern of the water as the ship drew away. I knew he was rich,
of course, she thought: I must have known, and that the world is full of
Fenellas waiting to marry him. Well, good luck to them - a man who sneers at
Mozart and runs from Strauss as though the devil is at his heels.
'I suppose we won't see
each other again after we land,' she said resolutely.
'I'd like to see you safe
to Belsize Park, but after that it would certainly be best if we went our
separate ways. If you want anything you have only to contact my solicitor - not
just about the annulment, but about anything with which you need help. He's an
old friend.'
Yes, she thought; your
solicitor. Not you.
'I owe you so much,' she
said. 'Not just that you got me out, but money. A lot of money. I must pay you
back.'
'Yes, you must do that,' he
said - and she turned to him in surprise. His voice was harsh and forbidding
and she had not expected that. All along he had been so open-handed, so
generous. 'And you know what that means?' 'That I must find a job and - '
'That's exactly what it
doesn't mean! The most stupid thing you can do is to take some trumpery job for
short-term gain. I can just see you being a shop assistant or some such
nonsense. The only sensible thing to do is to get yourself back to university
as soon as possible. If University College has offered you a place you couldn't
do better. Remember there are all sorts of grants now for people in your
position; the world is waking up at last to what is happening in Europe. Then
when you've got a degree you can get a decent job and pay me back in your own
good time.'
She digested this, but he
noticed that she made no promise and he frowned, fearing some quixotic nonsense
on her part - and Ruth, seeing the frown, remembered something else he had
bestowed.
'What about the ring?' she
asked. 'What shall I do with it?' 'Anything you like,' he said indifferently.
'Sell it, pawn it, keep it.'
Quelled, she looked down at
her hand. 'Anyway I'd better take it off before my parents ask questions. Or
Heini, if he's there already.'
She tugged at the ring,
turned it, tugged again. 'It's stuck,' she said, bewildered.
'It can't be,' he said. 'It
slipped on so easily.' 'Well, it is,' she said, suddenly furious. 'Perhaps your
hands are hot.'
'How could they be? It's
freezing? And indeed they were well clear of the harbour now and in a
biting wind.
He laid a hand lightly on
hers. 'No, they seem to be cold, but I can't see any chilblains. Try soap.'
She didn't answer, but
turned away and he watched her stamp off, her hair flying. She was away for a
considerable time and when she returned and laid her hand on the rail once
more, he was startled. Her ring finger was not just reddened, it looked as
though it had been put through a mangle.
'Good God,' he said. 'Was
it as bad as that?'
She nodded, still visibly
upset, and, realizing that she had retreated into her Old Testamental world of
omens and disasters, he left her alone.
When he spoke again, it was
to say: 'Look! There they are!’
And there, indeed, they
were: the White Cliffs of Dover, the hymned and celebrated symbol of freedom.
So much less impressive than foreigners always expected; not very high, not
very white… yet Quin, who had made light often enough of this undistinguished
piece of Cretaceous chalk, now found himself genuinely moved. After the horrors
he had left behind in Europe, he was more thankful than he could have imagined
to be home.
At the end of the Bergers'
second week in Belsize Park, Hilda was sacked. She had climbed onto a
stepladder to dust an ornament on the top of Mrs Manfred's bookcase, and the
bookcase had fallen on top of her. It was the only one in the house, Mrs
Manfred not being a reader, but glass-fronted, and a splinter had hit the dog.
No one was surprised, and
no one blamed Mrs Manfred, but Hilda took it hard and stayed in bed, covered in
zinc plaster, and wrote letters to the district officer in Bechuana-land
enquiring after the Mi-Mi, which she did not post because she had no money for
stamps and Leonie looked as though she would keel over if asked for anything at
all.
Uncle Mishak, as the days
passed and Ruth still did not come, got up at dawn and walked. He covered vast
distances in his slow, countryman's gait and he knew that this was risky, for
in one month, or perhaps two, his shoes would wear out, but he had to be out of
doors.
Mishak's beloved wife was
beyond hurt. He had brought a handful of earth from her grave into exile, but
he needed nothing to remind him of Marianne. She was inside his soul.
But to Ruth, in the
nightmare world his country had become, there could befall unthinkable harm.
Mishak had not wanted to come to the Felsengasse when Marianne died. He
appreciated Leonie's kindness, but he had wanted to stay in the house he had
built for his wife on the slopes of the Wienerwald. He had come to the flat to
thank Leonie for her offer and to refuse it. But Leonie was out. It was the
six-year -old Ruth, fresh from her bath, who had thrown her arms around him and
said: 'Oh, you're coming to live, won't it be wonderful! You'll take
me to the Prater, won't you - I mean the Wurstlprater, not the healthy part
with fresh air - and can we go and see the llamas at Schonbrunn? Inge says they
spit and make you quite wet. And you'll let me lean out of the window of the
cable car when we go up to the Kahlenberg, won't you? You won't keep
holding my legs?'
The blissful, self-seeking
greed of a secure child who longs to gobble up the world was something he never
forgot. Ruth was not sorry for him, she wanted him for her own purposes. Mishak
changed his mind and came; they saw the llamas and more…
Now sitting in Kensington
Gardens watching the children sail their boats, this quiet old man who
preferred not to step on molehills in case there was someone at home, found
that his knuckles had whitened on the sides of the bench, and knew that he
would kill without compunction anyone who harmed his niece.
Professor Berger said
little about his lost daughter. He went to Bloomsbury House each morning, he
worked in the library each afternoon, but no one, now, would have taken him for
a man of fifty-eight. Then one morning he took a bus to Harley Street where his
sponsor, Dr Friedlander, had his dental practice.
'I'm going back to Vienna,'
he said. 'I'm going to find Ruth and I have to ask you to lend me the fare.'
No one knew what it cost
him to ask for money. Since their arrival the Bergers had taken nothing from
their sponsor in spite of frequent offers of help.
'You can have the fare and
welcome,' said Friedlander. 'I'll lend it to you; I'll give it to you. The poor
Englanders are so grateful for someone who doesn't pull out their teeth as soon
as they sit down that they're beating a path to my door. But you're mad, Kurt.
They won't let you out again and then what'll happen to Leonie? Is that what
you imagine Ruth wants?'
'I can't do nothing,' said
the Professor, 'it isn't possible.'
'Have you told Leonie that
you mean to return?'
'Not yet. There's a big
student transport coming on Thursday. I'll wait till then, but after that…'
Leonie, meanwhile,
continued to be good. She approached the psychoanalyst from Breslau and tried
to per-suade that black-haired, gloomy lady to let her help with the
cooking so as to ensure a less lingering death for the bruised vegetables that
were Fraulein Lutzenholler's diet. She fetched Paul Ziller's shirts from his
room three houses down and washed them, and ironed his cummerbund, and she
visited other emigres in outlying suburbs. But at the end of the second week
her body was beginning to take over. She had fits of dizziness, her skirt began
to slip as she spectacularly lost weight. More frighteningly, she was finding
it increasingly difficult to be good. She wanted to hit people, to throttle
Miss Bates in her ever-dripping underwear. And if she stopped being good, the
thin thread that bound her to a beneficent providence would snap and
precipitate her daughter into hell.
Mrs Burtt, drying cups in
the scullery behind the Willow Tea Rooms, was in a bad mood. She personally did
not care for Jews, gypsies or Jehovah's Witnesses, and Commies, the world over,
deserved everything they got. But the papers that morning had been even fuller
than usual of nastiness -people in Berlin and Vienna being rounded up, old professors
having to scrub the streets with toothbrushes - and though she didn't even know
where the Polish Corridor was and didn't mind much what happened to the people
in the Sudetenland, whoever they were, it was beginning to look as though
something would have to be done about Hitler. Which brought her stomach
lurching downwards yet again, because one of the people who would be doing it
would be her nineteen-year-old son, Trevor, who that morning had said he
fancied the air force.
The customers were in low
spirits too, she could tell even without going out in front. They weren't
talking like they usually did, just reading the copies of Country Life
the ladies now brought downstairs. It was odd how they fancied all those
pictures of stately homes and the debutantes with the long necks who were going
to marry the Honourable Somebody or Other. You wouldn't think they'd be so
keen, all those professors and doctors full of degrees and learning.
Still, the guggle cake had
turned out a treat. Miss Maud had baked it last night and Miss Violet had iced
it, and though it didn't seem all that different to the rich sponge her auntie
made except it was in a wiggly mould, the customers would be pleased. It had
been Miss Violet's idea to wait till Mrs Berger came and let her have the first
slice on the house: sort of like launching a ship - and the least you could do
with what was happening to her daughter.
Only Mrs Berger, this
morning, was late.
Mrs Burtt was right. There
was a new hopelessness in the air. Everyone knew that Ruth had not been on the
student transport and that Professor Berger intended to go back to Vienna. Now
they faced the long weekend, so dreaded by exiles, when every place that could
help them was closed and even the libraries and cafes which shelter them were
barred.
Paul Ziller, trying to
immerse himself in an article about the oiling of field guns, had dreamt yet
again about his second violin, the plump, infuriating, curly-headed Klaus
Biberstein whose terrible jokes had sent the quartet into groans of protest,
whose unsuccessful pursuit of leggy blondes was a byword - and who only had to
tuck his Amati under his chin to become a god. Ziller missed his cellist, now
playing in a dance band in New York, and his viola player who was entirely
Aryan and had stayed behind, but missing Biberstein was different because he
was dead. Hearing the storm troopers come up the stairs to his fourth-floor
flat he had shouted to the passers by to clear the pavement, and jumped.
Dr Levy was playing chess
with the blond actor from the Burg Theatre, but it was hard to concentrate for
today he knew with certainty that he would never resit his medical exams in
English. At forty-two he was too old to begin again - and even if he passed,
they would find some other regulation for keeping him from practising. Not that
he blamed the medical profession. In Vienna the doctors had been just as
repressive, banding together against emigres from the East.
'I'm going to take your
knight,' he said to von Hofmann, who had not been allowed to say Schweinehund
or anything else in a film about the Great War. The actor's union had objected,
and anyway with another war perhaps on the way, no one wanted films about
soldiers. They wanted Fred As-taire and Rita Hayworth and Deanna Durbin. They
wanted ocean liners and Manhattan apartments furnished all in white - and who
ever said Schweinehund in them?
The lady with the poodle
entered, disappointing Mrs Weiss, with her bulging horsehair purse, who had
hoped it was someone for whom she could buy a cake and tell about her
daughter-in-law who that morning had forced open her bedroom window with some
rubbish about rooms needing to be aired. Mrs Weiss had never allowed wet air
into a room in which she slept and had told Moira so, and Georg (now called George)
who should have taken his mother's part, had slunk off to the garage and gone
to work.
At the table by the hat
stand the banker and his wife from Hamburg sat in silence, each reading a
magazine. In Germany they had been a successful and well-established menage
a trots, but Lisa's lover, a racially pure car salesman, had stayed behind
and though he tried to take his place, the banker knew that he was failing. The
walls of their small room were thin, the bed narrow - and afterwards, always,
she sighed.
Then Leonie entered the
cafe - and the sadness that was in all of them found a focus. There was no need
to ask if there was any news. This was a Demeter who had given up all hope of
rescuing her daughter from the Underworld. Ruth, like Persephone, was lost, and
in the streets of North-West London, winter had come.
Supported by her husband
and uncle, Leonie reached her table and sat down, but no one today did more
than nod a greeting. Even a smile seemed intrusive.
In the kitchen, Miss Violet
fetched the cake knife, Miss Maud cut a wedge from the virgin Guglhupf,
Mrs Burtt fetched a plate - and the procession set off.
'With the compliments of
the management,' said Miss Maud, setting the plate down in front of Leonie.
Leonie looked and
understood. She took in the sacrifice of principle, the honour they did her.
Then she breathed once deeply, like a swimmer about to go under. Her face
crumpled, her shoulders sagged - and she burst into the most dreadful and heart
rending sobs. It was weeping made incarnate: once begun it was impossible to
stop. Professor Berger took her hand, but for the first time in her life, she
pushed him away. She wanted to rid herself of tears and die.
In the cafe, no one else
made a sound. Dr Levy did not offer professional help; von Hofmann, usually so
gallant, did not proffer his handkerchief. And Miss Maud and Miss Violet looked
at each other, horrified by what they had done.
Then suddenly Paul Ziller,
at a table by the window, pushed back his chair.
'Oh dear!' said Miss Maud.
It was a mild remark,
coming from the daughter of a general, for the damage was considerable. The
coffee pot on the Bergers' table knocked over, staining the cloth, three
willow-pattern plates broken… Mrs Berger's chair, as she pushed it back, had
fallen on to Dr Levy's scrambled eggs. Nor had the poodle found it possible to
remain uninvolved. Barking furiously, he had collided with the hat stand which
had keeled over, missing the pottery cat but not the bowl of potpourri on the
windowsill, nor the pretty blue and white ashtray the ladies had brought from
Gloucestershire.
In the middle of the
wreckage stood Leonie, holding her daughter in her arms. Except that this
wasn't holding it was fusion. The tears she still shed were Ruth's
tears also; no human agency could have separated those two figures. Even for
her husband, Leonie could not relinquish Ruth… could only draw him closer with
a briefly freed hand. There had been joy in the moment of marriage, joy in
childbirth - but this was a joy like no other in the world.
Uncle Mishak was the first
member of the family to notice the devastation: Miss Violet dabbing at the
tables, Miss Maud picking up pieces of crockery, Mrs Burtt on her knees. To add
to the chaos, Aunt Hilda, who had leapt from her bed after redirecting Ruth to
the cafe, had fallen over the bucket into which the ladies were wringing their
cloths.
'I am so sorry,' said
Leonie, emerging, and did indeed try hard to embrace the concept of sorryness
and to calculate the damage.
It was now that Mrs Weiss
rose. Her raddled face was bathed in an unaccustomed dignity, her voice was
firm.
'I will pay!"
she announced. 'I will pay for everythink,,'
And she did pay. The ladies
accepted her offer; everyone understood that the old lady had to be part of
what was happening. Pound notes and half-crowns, shillings and sixpences
tumbled out of the dreadful purse made of the scalped hair of East Prussian
horses. She paid not for one coffee pot, but for two: not for three
willow-pattern plates, but six. For the first time since she had come to
England, the purse bulging with her daughter-in-law's conscience money was
empty; the clasp clicked together without catching on the unshed largesse. It
was Mrs Weiss' finest hour and not one person in the Willow Tea Rooms grudged
it to her.
'So!' said Leonie, some
twenty minutes later. 'Now tell us. How did you get here? How did you come?'
The tables had been
cleared, clean cloths spread, fresh coffee brought. Though she found it
necessary to sit so that her shoulder touched Ruth's, Leonie was now able to
listen.
Ruth had rehearsed her
story. Sitting between her parents, smiling across at Mishak and her friends
from Vienna, she said: 'Someone rescued me. An Englishman who helps people to
escape.'
'Like the Scarlet
Pimpernel?' enquired Paul Ziller, impressed.
'Yes, a bit like that.
Only, I mustn't ever get in touch with him again. None of us must. That was
part of the bargain.'
'There was nothing
illegal?' asked her father, stern even in the midst of his great happiness. 'No
forged papers or anything like that?'
'No, nothing illegal; I
swear it on Mozart's head,' said Ruth, and the Professor was satisfied, aware
of the position the composer's head occupied in his daughter's life.
Leonie, however, was not
satisfied at all. 'But this is awful! How can we thank him? How can we tell him
what he has done for us?' she cried. A multitude of deeds she could
have performed in gratitude - a plethora of baked cakes, embroidered shirts,
letters of ecstatic appreciation - rose up before her. She wanted to rush out
into the street after this unknown benefactor, to wash his feet as Mary
Magdalene had done with Jesus.
'It has to be like that,'
said Ruth, 'otherwise we might endanger other people that he could rescue' -
and aware that her mother was having difficulties, she quoted Miss Kenmore's
favourite sonnet. ' They also serve who only stand and wait,' said
Ruth, without, however, impressing Leonie who was not of the stuff that those
who only stand and wait are made.
It was only now that Ruth,
who had wanted to give her first moments wholly to her parents, dared to ask
the question she had held back.
'And Heini?' she said.
It was all right. Not aware
that she had crossed her hands on her breast in the age-old gesture of
apprehension, she saw her father smile.
'All is well, my dear,'
said the Professor. 'He's still in Budapest but we've had a letter. He is
coming.'
It was very quiet in the
cafe after the Bergers had left. One by one, the other customers got up to go,
but the three men who had know the family in Vienna sat on for a while.
'So Persephone has
returned,' said the actor.
Dr Levy nodded, but his
face was grave and the other two exchanged glances for the doctor had his own
Persephone: a flaxen-haired, blue-eyed and silly girl whom he nevertheless
loved. Hennie had been glad enough to marry the distinguished consultant she
had ogled while still a junior nurse, but she seemed in no hurry to join him in
exile.
'Perhaps a little
celebration?' suggested Ziller, for it did not seem to him a good idea that
Levy should return alone to his The Diseases of the Knee.
'We could just see what's
on,' said von Hofmann.
And what was on, as they
found when they had crossed the square and made their way uphill towards the
Odeon, was Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in Top Hat - and without
further consultation the three eminent gentlemen, none of whom could afford it,
entered the cinema - and Elysium.
While back in the kitchen
of the Willow Tea Rooms, Miss Maud and Miss Violet pronounced judgement.
'A very nicely behaved
girl,' said Miss Maud.
'Father would have liked
her,' said Miss Violet.
There was no higher
accolade, but as so often Mrs Burtt managed to get the last word.
'And pretty as a peach!'
When he was not at Bowmont
or on his travels, Quin lived in a flat on the Chelsea Embankment. On the first
floor of a tall Queen Anne house, it had a trellised iron-work verandah from which
one looked, over the branches of a mulberry tree, at London's river. The walls
of his drawing room were lined with books, a Constable watercolour hung over
the fireplace, Persian rugs were scattered on the parquet floor, but no one
visiting Quin ever lingered over the furnishings. Without exception, they moved
over to the French windows and stood looking out on the panorama of the Thames.
'You always live by water,
don't you, darling?' a woman had said to him: 'Very Freudian, don't you think?'
Quin did not think. He
liked Chelsea; the little shops in the streets that ran back from the river;
greengrocers and shoemakers and picture framers, and the pubs where the bargees
still drank, and though he did not go to his lectures at Thameside by boat, it
amused him to think that it was possible.
Just as a man's friends are
those who get there first and refuse to go away, so his servants are those who
have installed themselves and become, for one reason or another, impossible to
dismiss. Lockwood had been butler at Bowmont and should not have been shopping
and cooking and valeting Quin, a job which meant a considerable loss of salary
and prestige. Nevertheless, since Quin at the age of eight had brought his
first discoveries up from the beach and demanded that the Somerville Museum of
Natural History be set up in the stables, Lockwood had regarded the boy as his
responsibility. This involved no show of amiability on the butler's part. He
was a tall, thin man with a Neanderthal cranium and mud-coloured eyes and there
were those who maintained that Quin's unmarried state was due to the fact that
Lockwood had dismembered all aspiring Mrs Somervilles and thrown the pieces in
the river.
Quin arrived in the middle
of the afternoon, having dropped Ruth off in Belsize Park. Though he had been
away five months, Lockwood's greeting was measured.
'Saw you on the newsreel,'
he said, and carried Quin's suitcase to the bedroom.
But the furniture glowed
with polish, the post was stacked in neat piles, there were fresh flowers in the
vases, and now he returned with the tea tray and a plate of muffins.
'Will you be dining at
home, then?' When he left Bowrnont, Lockwood had dropped the obsequious manner
of an upper servant and now addressed Quin as if he was a wayward, but gifted,
nephew.
'Yes, I will, Lockwood.
That isn't boeuf en daube I can smell, by any chance?'
Lockwood bared his teeth in
what he regarded as a smile and agreed that it was. Knowing that he had made
his servant happy, for Lockwood was a formidable cook, Quin turned to the post.
There were innumerable invitations from hostesses who were presenting their
daughters, or giving dances for them, or making up little parties for Ascot and
Henley, and the knowledge that he had missed most of these without the
necessity of refusing, was pleasant. Though his professional mail went to the
university, there was a letter from Saskatchewan offering him the Chair of
Zoology and the usual missives from people who had found bones in their gardens
and were sure they were mammoths or mastodons. Among the list of names of those
who had telephoned, that of Mademoiselle Fleury, who was back from Paris, was
prominent.
But it was not Claudine
Fleury whom Quin now telephoned, though the thought of her brought a smile m
his face; it was his long-suffering deputy and senior lecturer at Thameside, Dr
Roger Felton.
Quin had not intended to
accept an academic post, if: was the journeys, the freedom to follow clues
wherever they turned up that he valued in his professional life, and though he
kept a room in the Natural History Museum, he had resisted all offers of a
chair.
The man who had changed
this was Lord Charlefont, the Vice Chancellor of Thameside, an enlightened
despot who had changed Thameside from a worthy but undistinguished college of
further education into a university with its own charter and a reputation
throughout the country. Under Charlefont's reign, Thameside had merged with an
art college in Pimlico, taken over the Institute of Natural Sciences and moved
into a gracious Palladian building on the south bank of the river which he had
wrested from the Ministry of Works.
'I know you don't need the
job,' he had said, offering Quin the Chair of Vertebrate Zoology, 'but we need
you. I want excellence; I want someone with an international reputation. There
shouldn't be any trouble about going off on journeys -I can always find someone
to fill in for a term or two - and I think you'd like teaching.'
So Quin had accepted,
specifying a personal chair at a lower salary and no administration, and the
arrangement had worked well. He found he did like teaching; in Roger Felton he
had a willing and efficient deputy, and the field course he ran at Bowmont had
become a model of its kind. Moreover, in Lord Charlefont he discovered not only
the ideal employer but a friend. The Vice Chancellor's Lodge at Thameside was
built into the main courtyard and Charlefont kept open house. A first-year
student with problems was as welcome as the most eminent academic and Quin had
enjoyed some of the best conversations of his life in the long drawing room
with its terrace on the river.
But six months ago, just
before Quin left for India, Charlefont had had a heart attack and died within
hours. A good end for a strong and active man, but a blow to Thameside and to
Quin. Of his successor, Desmond Plackett, who had spent ten years in the Indian
Educational Service and been rewarded with a knighthood, Quin, as yet, knew
nothing.
Now, dialling the
university, he was put through at once to Felton in his laboratory. His deputy
taught the Marine
Biology course, as well as
dealing with admissions: a friendly man, deeply concerned about the students,
whose spectacle frames seemed to lighten or darken according to his mood. 'Oh,
you're back, are you?' said Felton. Since Quin himself had abolished the
protocol and rank-pulling which still existed in so many university
departments, he now had to endure some strong remarks about professors who left
their underlings to mark their exam papers while they gallivanted about in
foreign cities.
'It wasn't quite like that
- but I'm sorry about the extra load. How have they done?'
'Oh, brilliantly on your
questions, of course. I dare say you could teach Palaeontology to a chimpanzee
and get him a First. The new intake looks promising too - numbers are up
again.'
'You haven't had any
applications from refugee organizations, have you? University College is taking
foreign students, I know.' 'Not so far.'
'Well, if you get any,
accept them - it's hell over there, I can tell you. Even if it means putting
them to work in a broom cupboard, say yes.'
'All right, I will. Though
I don't know what the new VC will say; he doesn't seem to be much of a one for
the huddled masses yearning to breathe free.' 'Plackett's a dud, is he?'
'He's one of those faceless
men - adores committees. The paperwork's trebled since he came, but there's no
harm in him; it's his wife that's the bother. Wants to improve the moral tone
of the university and makes the college servants run her errands. She's a
Croft-Ellis by birth - one of the Rutland Croft-Ellises. Mean anything to you?'
'Nothing earth shattering.'
'But that's not all,' said
Felton ghoulishly. 'There's a daughter!'
'There usually is, I've
found,' said Quin resignedly. 'Ah, but it's worse than that! She's coming to us
to do a Zoology degree and she's going straight into the third year because
she's covered most of the ground in India. I inter-viewed her last week and she
was kind enough to tell me that she thought our course would be acceptable.'
'Good God," said Quin.
'Exactly so,'
Quin spent the next two
days in the Natural History Museum, supervising the disposal of the specimens
which Mil-ner had steered safely through the customs. Thameside he avoided,
deciding to go up to Bowmont first and come back to prepare for the autumn term
when the man who was filling in as visiting Professor had gone back to the
States. Professor Robinson was prone to anxiety: he had worried because Quin's
name was still on the door of his room, and about the length of his gown, and
if seemed tactful to let him complete his tenure without interference.
Hut there was one chore
which he intended to tackle before, he went north: the undoing of his marriage.
The affairs of Bowmout were
in the hands of a long-established and dozy firm of solicitors in Berwick-upon-Tweed,
bill for quick action in this highly personal matter, Quin had selected Dick
Proudfoot, of Proudfoot, Buckley and Snaith, whom he had known in Cambridge.
Proudfoot was in his early
thirties, a chubby, balding man whose amiable expression became considerably
less amiable as Quin began to speak.
'You have done what?'
'I have married an Austrian
girl to get her over here. She's partly Jewish and she was in danger - there
was nothing else to do. Now I want you to get me a divorce as quickly as you
can. I'll provide the evidence, of course. I imagine that business still works
about being caught in bed in a hotel by the chambermaid?’
'Funny, i thought you were
intelligent,' said Mr Proud-foot nastily. 'I remember people saying it in
Cambridge. What sort of quixotic idiocy is this? Even if it were possible for
you to convince the judge that this kind of caper represents a genuine adultery
and they're getting very suspicious these days it would hardly secure you a
speedy divorce.
You can't even begin to
petition till three years after the marriage.'
Quin frowned. 'I thought
the Herbert Act had changed all that? The poor man worked hard enough to get it
through.'
'It has increased the
grounds on which a divorce may be granted, but in this case the three-year
clause still stands.'
'Well, it'll have to be an
annulment then,' said Quin cheerfully. 'That was my first idea, but it sounded
a bit ecclesiastical.'
Mr Proudfoot sighed and
wrote something on a piece of paper. The laws on nullity were archaic and
complex, and his subject was company law. 'What do you suggest? Nullity can be
declared if one or both parties are under sixteen at the time of the ceremony,
if there is a pre-existing marriage, if the parties are related by prohibited
degrees of consanguinity, if there is insanity in one partner unknown to the
other at the time of the marriage, or if the bride is a nun.'
Quin waved an impatient
hand. 'Well, she's not my sister or a nun and she's not technically insane
unless trying to swim out of Switzerland with a rucksack can be regarded as
mental derangement. What else?'
'There is nonconsummation,'
said Mr Proudfoot reluctantly, seeing minefields ahead.
'That's the one,' said Quin
cheerfully. 'I spent our bridal night in the corridor of the Orient Express.'
'You may have to prove it.'
The lawyer made another note, adding snarkily that he presumed Quin would plead
wilful refusal to consummate rather than incapacity. 'And there's another
difficulty.'
'What's that?'
'Well, you married this
girl to give her British citizenship. But if you prove nullity ex causa
precedenti - that is to say if you dissolve the marriage on grounds
existing before it took place - then it is possible that the British
citizenship which followed from the marriage could be imperiled. Of course,
nonconsummation isn't in this category, but if she's under twenty-one we could
be in trouble. The naturalization of minors is under review, but in my opinion
we'd be unwise to go for nullity until her status as a British subject is
confirmed and she has her own passport.'
Quin looked at his watch.
'Look, do what you can, Dick, and as quickly as possible. The girl's very young
and she's in love with a soulful concert pianist. Oh, and write to her, will
you, and say we're putting it through as fast as we can. Offer her any help she
needs and charge it to me, but I think it's best if I don't see her again.'
'That isn't just best, it's
absolutely essential,' said Mr Proudfoot. 'If there's anything that can scupper
any kind of divorce or annulment, it's the three Cs.'
'The three whats?'
'Connivance. Collusion.
Consent. Any suspicion that you've been fixing things between you and the
courts will throw out the evidence then and there.'
'Good God! You mean they'd
rather we parted in anger than sensibly and in accord?'
'That is precisely what I
mean,' said Mr Proudfoot.
It was hot, the summer of
1938. In the streets of Belsize Park and Swiss Cottage and Finchley, the
pavements glittered, the dustbins gave out Rabelaisian smells. In the
ill-equipped kitchens of the lodging houses, milk turned sour and expiring
flies buzzed dismally on strips of sticky paper. Children in buggies were
pushed up the hill to Hempstead Heath to picnic in the yellowing grass or catch
tiddlers in Whitestone Pond. In Spain, Franco's Fascists scored victory upon
victory; in Germany, Hitler stepped up his tirades about the Sudetenland, ready
to move against the Czechs. Mussolini started to ape, though less effectively,
the Führer's measures against the Jews.
The British would have
found it vulgar to let the ill-bred ravings of foreigners interfere with their
pleasures. Trenches were dug in the parks, leaflets were issued giving
instructions about the issue of gas masks; the fleet stood ready. But the rich
left without signs of perturbation for their grouse moors or houses by the sea.
The poor, as always, stayed behind and took the sunshine on their doorsteps or
in their tiny gardens.
The refugees were poor and
they stayed.
Ruth's arrival had enabled
her family to try to reconstitute their lives. Professor Berger now left for
the public library each morning with his briefcase, to sit between Dr Levy and
a tramp with holes in his shoes who came to read the paper, and hid from
Leonie, and partly even from himself, the knowledge that without the references
and notes he had left behind, his book could only be a travesty of what he
might have written. Aunt Hilda, having discovered that entry to the British
Museum was free, spent hours wandering round the Anthropology section and found
(among the exhibits from Bechuanaland) an error which caused her the kind of
excited melancholy so common in scholars presented with other people's follies.
'It is not a Mi-Mi
drinking cup,' she would say each evening. 'I am quite certain. The attribution
is wrong.'
'Well then, go and tell
someone, Hilda,' Leonie would suggest.
'No. I am only a guest in
this country. I have no right.'
Uncle Mishak now had park
benches he had made his own, and friends among the gardeners who kept London's
squares and gardens tidy. Like a small boy, he would come home with treasures:
a clump of wallflowers which still retained their scent, thrown onto a compost
heap; a few cherries dropped onto a pavement from an overhanging branch. As for
Leonie, once she'd accepted the miracle of Ruth's return, she began to repair
the network of friends and relations, of good causes and lame dogs, that had
filled her life in Vienna. Dispersed and scattered these might be, but there
was still her godmother's sister, newly arrived in Swiss Cottage, a
schoolfriend married to a bookbinder in Putney, and an ancient step-uncle from
Moravia, a little touched in the head, who sat under the statue of Queen
Victoria on the Embankment, convinced that she was Maria Theresia and he was
still in his native city.
As for the ladies of the
Willow Tea Rooms, they responded to the worsening of the situation in Europe with
a gesture of great daring. They decided to stay open in the evening - to the
almost sinfully late hour of nine o'clock. This, however, meant engaging a new
waitress — and here they were extremely fortunate.
Ruth's first concern when
she arrived had been to hide her marriage certificate and all other evidence of
her involvement with Professor Somerville whom she could now only serve by
never going near him or mentioning his name.
This was not as easy as it
sounded. Number 27 Belsize Close was not a place where privacy was high on the
list of priorities, nor had Ruth ever had to have secrets from her parents.
Fortunately she had read many English adventure stories in which intrepid boys
and girls buried treasure beneath the loose floor-boards of whatever house they
lived in.
Accustomed to the solid
parquet floors of her native city, she had been puzzled by this, but now she
understood how it could be done. The floor of the Bergers' sitting room,
hideously furnished with a sagging moquette sofa, a fumed oak table and brown
chenille curtains, was covered in linoleum, and her parents' bedroom next to it
was obviously unsuitable. But in the room at the back, with its two narrow
beds, which Ruth shared with her Aunt Hilda, the floor was covered only by a
soiled rag rug. Dragging aside the wash-stand, she managed to prise open one of
the splintered boards and make a space into which she lowered a biscuit tin
decorated with a picture of the Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret Rose patting
a corgi dog, and containing her documents and the wedding ring which she meant
to sell, but not just yet.
Next she went to the post
office and secured a box number to which all mail could be sent, and wrote to
Mr Proudfoot to tell him what she had done. After which she settled down to
look for work. It was nearly two months before the beginning of the autumn term
at University College and though she had heeded Quin's admonitions and was
looking forward very much to being a student once again, she intended to spend
every available second till then helping her family.
Jobs as mother's helps were
easy to come by. Within a week, Ruth found herself trailing across Hampstead
Heath in charge of the three progressively educated children of a lady weaver.
Untroubled by theories on infant care, she felt sorry for the pale, confused,
abominably behaved little creatures in their soiled linen smocks, desperately
searching for something they were not allowed to do. When the middle one, a
six-year-old boy, ran across a busy road, she smacked him hard on the leg which
caused instant uproar among his siblings.
'We want it done to us too.
Properly,' said the oldest. 'So that you can see the mark, like with Peter.'
Ruth obliged and soon the
walks became extremely enjoyable, but, of course, the money was not very good
and it was Ruth's announcement that she intended to spend her evenings as a
waitress in the Willow Tea Rooms which brought Leonie's period of saintly
virtue to a sudden end.
For several days after Ruth
was restored to her, Leonie had kept to her vow never again to argue with Ruth
or speak a cross word to her. Just to be able to touch Ruth's hand across the
table, just to hear her humming in the bath, had been a joy so deep that it had
precluded ever crossing Ruth's will again. This, however, was too much.
'You will do nothing of the
sort!' she yelled. 'No daughter of mine is going to have her behind pinched by
old gentlemen and take tips!'
But Ruth was adamant. 'If
Paul Ziller can play gypsy music in a cummerbund, I can be a waitress. And
anyway, what about you doing the ironing for that awful old woman across the
road?'
Leonie said it was
different and canvassed the inmates of the Willow Tea Rooms for support which
did not come.
'Of course, when she begins
university it will be another matter, but now she will want to help,' said
Ziller, meaning - as did Dr Levy, and von Hofmann from the Burg Theatre and the
banker from Hamburg - that the sight of this bright-haired girl bearing down on
them with a tray of an evening was a pleasure they did not think it necessary
to forego.
So Ruth became a waitress
at the Willow and was undoubtedly good for trade. For the weary, disillusioned
exiles, Ruth was a sign that there was still hope in the world. She had been
rescued mysteriously by an Englishman and that in itself was a thought that
warmed the heart. And not only was Ruth young and sweet and funny, but she was
in love!
'I have had a letter!' Ruth
would say, and soon everyone in the Willow Tea Rooms and the square knew about
Heini, everyone asked about him. The news that Heini's visa was almost through
made them as happy as if the good fortune was their own - and they all
understood that it was essential that when Heini arrived, he had his piano.
It was the matter of
Heini's piano which disposed of the last remnants of saintliness still adhering
to Leonie. For there was only one place where it could possibly go: in the
Bergers' so-called sitting room - and Leonie was perfectly correct in saying
that it would make the place impossibly crowded.
'All right, he can sleep on
the sofa till he has his own place, but Heini and the piano - Ruth, be
reasonable.'
But when has love been
reasonable? Seeing her daughter's distress, Leonie consulted her husband, sure
that his strictness would prevail. But the week in which they had believed Ruth
lost had changed the Professor.
'We shall manage,' he said.
'I work in the library in any case and we can take one of the chairs into our
bedroom.'
So Ruth had put a jam jar
on the windowsill, with a label on it saying Heini's Piano. It was an
entirely British jam jar, which gave her satisfaction, having contained Oxford
marmalade and been retrieved from the dustbin of the nursery school teacher on
the ground floor, but it was not filling up very quickly. Ruth had made
enquiries about the deposit on the kind of piano Heini required and it was two
guineas even before the weekly rental and there was a delivery charge as well.
She gave her wages from the progressive lady weaver to her mother and had hoped
that the money from the Willow Tea Rooms would help, but there always seemed to
be an emergency: Aunt Hilda needed throat pastilles, or the teapot broke its
spout. Though she bought nothing for herself during those long hot weeks of
summer, not a hair ribbon, not an ice cream on the most sizzling day, the heap
of coins at the bottom of the jar remained pitifully small.
If Heini's letters were
shown to everyone and were matters for rejoicing, the letters from Mr
Proudfoot, arriving secretly at Ruth's post office box, were another matter. Mr
Proudfoot had seen fit to lay the conditions of nullity before Ruth, who found
them daunting.
'Are you sure
there's no insanity in the family?' she asked her puzzled parents. 'What about
Great-Aunt Miriam?'
'To believe that the Kaiser
was a reincarnation of Tutankhamen may be eccentric, but it is not insane,'
said her father firmly. But if the immediate prospects for annulment were poor,
Mr Proudfoot was helpful about getting her British naturalization confirmed,
sending her forms in prepaid envelopes and continuing to offer assistance. That
Quin himself never wrote or sent a message was only what she had expected and
did not disappoint her in the least.
By the middle of August:,
the crisis over Czechoslovakia began to dominate the newspapers. Hitler's rantings
grew more demented; newsreel pictures showed him strutting about with his arm
round Mussolini or shaking his fist at anyone who dared to interfere with the
concerns of Eastern
Europe. Cabinet ministers
abandoned their grouse moors and began to shuttle back and forth between London
and
Paris, between Paris and
Berlin The Czechs appealed for help.
Great Britain's increasing
preparations for war affected the inhabitants of Belsize Park in various ways.
Mrs Weiss looked up at a large grey barrage balloon floating above her, said, 'Mein
Gott, vat is zat?', fell over a hole in the pavement and was conveyed to
Hempstead Hospital for stitches in her nose.Uncle Mishak, passing a poster
which urged him to
Keep Calm and Dig, did just that,
excavating a vegetable patch in the rubble-strewn garden behind the house. In
the
Willow Tea Rooms, Miss Maud
pored anxiously over a leaflet giving instructions for the assembling of a
prefabri-cated air-raid shelter and received much good advice from the male
customers who professed to understand them. Mrs
Surdt stopped singing over
the washing up because her
Trevor had been passed fit
for the air force, and Dr Levy, though he had made it perfectly dear that he
was not entitled to practise medicine, was pulled into a neighbouring house to
resuscitate a man with a weak heart whose wife had sought to amuse him by
coming to bed in her gas mask.
For Ruth, the crisis meant
only the dread of separation from Heini. She emptied the jam jar and sent
frantic cables to Budapest, but his emigration papers, though expected at any
moment., still hadn't come through. There was one matter, however, on which she
sought enlightenment from
Miss Maud and Miss Violet
who, as general's daughters, could be expected to know about the army.
'Would someone aged thirty,
or a bit over, be called up?' 'Only if the war went on for a King time,' Miss
Maud replied.
It was during these dark
days that Ruth received news which would normally have caused her the deepest
dis-appointment. University College had given her place on the Zoology course
to another refugee. They were now full up and could not admit her in the coming
year.
'It was a muddle,' she
said, holding out the letter. 'When I wasn't on the student transport, the
Quakers got in touch with them and they had so many people begging to come that
they accepted someone else. They're going to see if they can get me into
another college, but they're not very hopeful as it's so late.'
Ruth, after the first
shock, made the best of it. 'It doesn't matter,' she said. 'I want to go on
working anyway, to help you and to help Heini when he comes.' 'It matters a
great deal,' said the Professor sternly. For him and his wife, Ruth's rejection
was a bitter blow. Like parents the world over, they would accept any
tribulation if their child could go forward into a better future. Ruth must not
live in the twilit world of the refugees, the world of menial jobs, of anxiety
about permits and poverty and fear. 'I wonder if I should get in touch with
Quinton Somer-ville,' said the Professor that night when Ruth had gone to bed.
'I feel sure he would help.' 'No, I wouldn't do that.'
The Professor looked at her
in surprise. 'Why not?' But Leonie, who seldom found a use for logical thought
and was pursuing a hunch so nebulous that it could not possibly be uttered,
just said that she thought it was a bad idea - and in the days that followed
nobody had time to think of their personal lives.
All the cliches written
later about the Munich crisis were true. The world did hold its breath, the storm
clouds did gather over Europe, strangers did stop each other in the street and
ask for news. Then Neville Chamberlain, that obstinate old man who had never
been in an aeroplane before, flew to meet Hitler, flew home again, and back
once more… to return at last with a piece of paper in which he believed wholly
and which he held up to his people with the words 'Peace in our time.'
There were many who cried
appeasement and many - and the refugees, of course, among them - who knew what
Hitler's promises were
worth, and that the Czechs had been betrayed, yet who could want war? As the
crowds cheered in front of Buckingham Palace, Ruth waltzed with Mrs Burtt among
the pots and pans in the Willow Tea Rooms kitchen because Heini could come now
and Mrs Burtt's Trevor sleep safe in his bed.
It was in this time of
renewed hope, when the chrysanthemums glowed gold and russet in the flower
seller's basket and little boys called at Number 27 for the conkers Uncle
Mishak collected in his wanderings, that Professor Berger came home to find
Ruth reading a letter - and was startled by the radiance in her face.
'From Heini?' he asked. 'He
is coming?'
She shook her head. 'It's
from the University of Thameside. They've offered me a place, straight away. I
start next week.'
He took the letter she held
out to him. It was signed by the Admissions Tutor, but no one was deceived by
that.
'This is Somerville's
doing,' said the Professor, and felt a weight lift from his heart because it
had hurt, the belief that his young protege had forgotten them. 'He's Professor
of Zoology there. And sternly to Ruth: 'You will be worthy of his kindness, I
know.'
She had retired into her
hair, trying to still the confusion in her mind and remained in it,
figuratively speaking, till late that night when her Aunt Hilda's snuffling
proclaimed her to be asleep, and she could lean out of the window, breathing in
the sooty air, and try to think things out.
Why had he done it? Why had
Quin, who had made it so clear that they should never meet again, accepted her
as a student? What had made him override his decision and ignore the warnings
of his solicitor about collusion and consent and heaven knew what else, to give
her this chance?
But what did it matter why?
He had done it, and the future lay bright and shining before her. She would be
the most studious student they had ever seen at Thameside. She would work till
she burst, she would get a First - she would get the best First they had ever
had - and she would do it without ever making him speak to her, without even
once looking his way.
That her acceptance had
nothing to do with Quin, that he did not even know of it, was something which
could not have occurred to Ruth or to her family, accustomed as they were to
the formal working of Austrian academic life, yet it was so. Quin always left
the admissions, indeed most of the administration, to his second in command, Dr
Felton, and was himself not only not in London, but not even in his
Northumbrian home.
Believing in the
inevitability of war, he had taken himself off to a naval base in Scotland to
evoke the revered name of his appalling grandfather, Rear Admiral 'Basher'
Somerville, and get himself into the navy. To talk himself into the corridors
of power had been relatively easy; to talk himself out of them, as the threat
of war receded, was taking longer.
Professor Somerville was
going to be late for the beginning of term.
'What do you mean, he isn't
back? Term begins next week. Do you intend to allow this kind of behavior from
your staff?'
Lady Plackett was annoyed.
Since her husband had assumed his new position as Vice Chancellor of Thameside,
she had taken a great deal of trouble planning suitable occasions at which the
staff would be received. Their predecessor, Lord Charlefont, had been
lackadaisical in the extreme and the position of the Lodge, marked off only by
its Doric columns and Virginia creeper from the Arts Block which ran along the
river, lent itself to the kind of haphazard coming and going which she had no
intention of permitting. She had already had a Private notice put on
the flagged path which led from the main courtyard to their front door, and
instructed the college servants to erect a chain-link fence to keep their part
of the river terrace free from students who seemed to think they had a right to
sit there and eat their sandwiches.
To insist on one's privacy
was essential, as it was essential to restore the high moral tone of the
university; students holding hands or embracing could not, of course, be
tolerated. But Lady Plackett also meant to give … to enrich college
life with her hospitality and make the Lodge a place where good conversation
and good breeding could be relied upon. To do this, however, she had to
separate the sheep from the goats and find out what material was to hand, and
to this end she had planned a series of organized entertainments for the
beginning of term. First the professors to sherry, properly labelled, of
course, with their names and departments, for unlabelled gatherings were never
satisfactory - then the lecturers to fruit juice… and lastly, in batches of
twenty or so, the students to play paper and pencil games.
Now ticking off the labels
on safety pins against the names of the senior staff, she found opposite
Professor Somerville's name the words: 'Unable to attend'.
'He's up in Scotland,' said
Sir Desmond. A pale man with pince-nez, he had the kind of face it is
impossible to recall within five minutes of seeing it, and owed his appointment
to the fact that all the other candidates for the Vice Chancellorship had
enough personality to acquire enemies. 'Apparently the Foreign Office tried to
enrol him for some secret work in Whitehall - code breaking or some such thing.
Somerville thought it would mean sitting in a bunker all through the war so he
went up to try and get himself into the navy.'
'Well I hope you mean to
have a word with him,' said Lady Plackett. She was taller than her husband,
with a long back, a long face and the close-set navy-blue eyes which
characterized the Croft-Ellises. Having done several Seasons without, so to
speak, a matrimonial nibble, Lady Plackett had accepted the son of an undistinguished
chartered accountant and set herself to advancing his career. It had not been
easy. Desmond, when she met him, did not even know that Cholmondely was
pronounced Chumley, but she had persevered and now, after twenty-five years,
she could honestly say that she was no longer ashamed to take him home to
Rutland.
'No, dear, I don't think
that would be wise,' said Sir Desmond mildly. 'We need Professor Somerville
rather more than he needs us.'
'What do you mean?'
'He's a very eminent man;
they're constantly offering him positions abroad and Cambridge has been trying
to get him back ever since he left. Charlefont had quite a job persuading him
to take the Chair and Somerville took it on condition he could get leave for
his journeys. The college has done pretty well out of him - there's always
money for Palaeontology because of his distinction and the field course he runs
at his place in Northumberland is supposed to be the highlight of the year.'
'Northumberland?' said Lady
Plackett sharply. 'Whereabouts in Northumberland?'
Sir Desmond frowned. 'I
can't remember the name. Bow something, I think,'
'Not…' She had flushed with
excitement. 'Not Bowmont?"
'That's right. That's what
it was.'
'Bow something' indeed! Not
for the first time, Lady Plackett felt the loneliness of those who marry
beneath them. 'You mean he's that Somerville? Quinton Somerville - the
owner of Bowmont? Old Basher's grandson?'
Sir Desmond said his name
was Quinton, certainly, and asked what was so unusual about Bowmont, but this
was a question it was impossible to answer. Those who moved in the right
circles knew why Bowmont was special, and to those who didn't one couldn't
explain. 'I know his aunt,' said Lady Plackett. 'Well, slightly. I shall write
to her.' And eagerly to her husband who was leafing through the book of staff
addresses: 'He isn't married yet, is he?'
Sir Desmond looked for the
M opposite married members of staff, found it absent and said so.
Without hesitation, Lady
Plackett dropped the label with Professor Somerville's name into the wastepaper
basket. This man did not belong in large gatherings of people eating canapes.
Professor Somerville would come to one of the intimate dinner parties with
which she meant to put Thames-ide on the map and there he would find, in the gracious
setting of her home, his intellectual equal, his future student and a girl of
his own background. Would find, in short, Verena.
The Placketts' only
daughter was twenty-three years old and had inherited not only her mother's
breeding but her father's brains. From the age of four, when she made it clear
that she preferred her abacus to her dolls, it was evident that Verena would
grow up to be an intellectual. The great Dr Johnson, of dictionary fame, had
been told by his mother to repeat what she had taught him immediately to the
next person he met, and if it was the milkman, no matter.
'In that way you always
remember it,' she had said to her son.
There was no need for Lady
Plackett so to instruct her daughter. Verena took in information and gave it
out with equal efficiency. In India they had surrounded her with tutors and at
nineteen she had enrolled in the European College at Hyderabad. It had been a
brave step for her parents to take: true, the students and staff were all
white, but it meant giving Verena an unusual amount of freedom. Verena had not
abused it. Science was her preferred subject, and it was without difficulty
that she came top in every exam she took. Even so, when she had taken her basic
degree, her mother insisted on sending her ahead to do the Season with
her Croft-Ellis cousins from Rutland.
Lady Plackett's intentions
were good, but the plan was not a success. Verena stood five foot eleven in her
socks and it is difficult to do the Season in socks. Nor did Verena make any
secret of the fact that the vapid young subalterns and stockbrokers at the tops
of whose heads she gazed on the dance floor, bored her beyond belief. As soon
as her parents returned from India, she announced her intention of taking an
Honours Degree, and taking it at Thameside.
About this, her mother had
been uneasy. Though she had intended to look among the intelligentsia for a
husband for Verena, it had been among Nobel Laureates or Fellows of the Royal
Society that she had expected to find someone suitable, not among the
corduroy-clad and bearded professors who so often did the actual teaching. Now,
though, it looked as though Verena's instinct had been right and it was with a
light step that she made her way up to her daughter's room.
'Verena, I have something
to tell you!'
Her daughter sat at her
tidy desk, a large text book illustrated with diagrams of bones open in front
of her, a propelling pencil and a notebook on her right, a ruler on her left.
'Yes?'
Verena had inherited not
only her mother's height, but her close-set, downward curving eyes and Roman
nose. Now she looked up without rancour at the interruption, though she had
reached a difficult chapter and would have preferred to be alone.
'I've just been speaking to
your father and it turns out that Professor Somerville - the head of the
Zoology Department
- is Quin
Somerville, the owner of Bowmont. Frances Somerville's nephew.'
'Yes, Mother. I know.'
Her mother stared at her.
'You know?'
Verena nodded. 'I made it
my business to find out. That's why I decided to do Zoology Honours. His
reputation is second to none. I shall take his option, of course.'
Not for the first time,
Lady Plackett marvelled at her daughter's perspicacity. Verena had spent the
summer with her cousins in Rutland, yet she was already better informed than
her parents.
'I'm going to invite him to
dinner as soon as he gets back,' she said. 'A really carefully chosen group of
guests. You will be seated next to him, of course, so that you have time to
talk.'
Verena returned to her
book.
'Professor Somerville will
find me ready,' she said.
Ruth walked through the
gates of Thameside College, greeted the porter in his lodge, and looked with
delight at the closely mown grass, the ancient walnut tree, the statue of
someone not on horseback.
Thameside was beautiful.
She knew it to be one of the oldest buildings in London, but she had not
expected the cloistered peace, the flowerbeds lapping the grey walls - and
through a wide arch on the far side of the quadrangle, a breathtaking view of
the river and the soaring dome of St Paul's on the other bank. The University
of Vienna was larger, more formal, but Ruth, passing the windows of book-lined
rooms and lecture theatres, was in a familiar world.
The statue, when she
reached it, turned out to be of William Wordsworth, which was entirely suitable
for he had stood on Westminster Bridge and said that Earth has not anything
to show more fair, with which, having just crossed the river, she
absolutely agreed. And there was a late rose, a golden voluptuous rambler curling
round the railings of the Students' Union which seemed to hold all the
fragrance of the dying year.
She came as Vienna's
representative to the Groves of Academe and carried with her not only the good
wishes of everyone at Number 27 and the Willow Tea Rooms, but their gifts in a
straw basket pressed on her by Mrs Burtt. Though term did not begin for another
two days, her father had insisted she take the magnifying glass he had had
since his student days; Dr Levy had bequeathed his old dissecting kit rolled in
a canvas pouch - and setting up a delicious rustle under her woollen skirt was
the Venetian lace petticoat Leonie had worn when she was presented to the
Austrian Chancellor.
Her appointment with Dr
Felton was for 2.30; glancing at the clock which topped the archway to the
river, she saw that she was ten minutes early. About to make her way towards
the water's edge, she was arrested by a sound of unutterable melancholy coming
from the basement of the Science Building on her left. Letting go of the rose
she had been smelling, she turned her head. The noise came again and this time
it was unmistakable. Somewhere down there, in a state of apparent distress and
abandonment, was a sheep.
Picking up her basket, Ruth
made her way down the stone steps, pushed open a door - and found herself in a
dusty, unlit laboratory. A Physiology lab, instantly familiar from her days in
Vienna when she had ridden her tricycle through the animal huts of the
university, watched by the pink eyes of a thousand snow-white rats. There were
indeed rats here, and the big bins holding the flaky yellow maze they fed on, a
pair of scales, microscopes, a centrifuge… and in one corner, staring from a
wooden pen, the pale face and melancholy, Semitic snout of a large white ewe.
'Ah yes, you're lonely,'
said Ruth approaching. In the deserted room, she spoke in the soft dialect of
Vienna. 'But you see I musn't touch you because you belong to Science. You're
an experimental animal; you're like a Vestal Virgin dedicated to higher
things.'
The sheep butted its head
against the side of the pen, then lifted it hopefully to gaze at her with its
yellow eyes. It seemed to be devoid of tubes or other signs of experimentation
- seemed in fact to be in excellent health - but Ruth, well-trained as she was,
kept her distance.
'I can see that you aren't
where you would choose to be,' she went on, 'but I assure you that right now
the world is full of people who are not where they would choose to be. All over
Belsize Park and Finchley and Swiss Cottage I could show you such people. And
you belong to a noble race because you are in the psalms and St Francis chose
you to preach to and I can see why because you have listening eyes.'
The sheep's butting became
more frenzied, but its mood was lifting. The string of bleats it was emitting
seemed to be social rather than despairing. Then quite suddenly it sat down,
sticking out one hoof and extending its neck like someone listening to a
lecture.
'Very well, I will recite
some Goethe for you which you will like, I think, because he is an extremely
calming poet, though somewhat melancholy, I do admit. Now let me see, what
would you like?'
In his room on the second
floor of the Science Building, Dr Roger Felton blew the contents of a pipette
into a tank of sea slugs and frowned. There should have been wreaths of
translucent eggs now, hanging on the weeds, and there were not. He could get
more slugs from the zoo, but he had set his heart on breeding his own specimens
- not just for the students in his Marine Biology class, but because the Opisthobranchia,
with their amazingly large nerve cells, were his particular interest.
All round the room, in
salt-water tanks cooled and aerated by complicated tubes and pumps, a series of
creatures swam or scuttled or clung to the sides of the glass: sea urchins and
brittle stars, prawns and cuttle fish, and an octopus currently turning pink
inside a hollow brick. Dr Felton loved his subject and taught it well. The
nuptial dance of the ragworm on the surface of the ocean, the selfless paternity
of the butterfish, entranced him as much now as it had done when he first
beheld it fifteen years ago, but there were problems, not least of them the new
Vice Chancellor who had made it clear that it was publications that counted,
not teaching.
Dr Felton was aware that he
ought to spend more time on his research and less on the students, but someone
had to see to them with the Prof so much away. Not that he grudged Quin his
journeys - having a man of that calibre in the department made all the difference.
If Felton had any doubts they would have been stilled by the two terms during
which Professor Robinson had done Quin's teaching and the sound of laughter
vanished from the common room.
Still, instead of getting
ready to stimulate the posterior ganglion of the slug he had placed in
readiness on a Petri dish, he now had to interview the new student wished on
them by University College who had made a mess of things. Moving over to his
desk, he took out Ruth Berger's particulars and glanced through the eulogy
provided by Vienna for the benefit of UC and now passed on to him. She
certainly seemed to be well up to the standard of the third years and able to
take her Finals in the summer. Her exam results were excellent and her father
was an eminent palaeontologist. Even without the Profs instructions to accept
refugees at all costs, he would have tried to find a place for her.
A knock at the door made
him look up, ready to receive Miss Berger. But the figure who strode into the
room, filling it with her bulk, her Nordic blondeness and Valkyrie-like
strength, was Dr Elke Sonderstrom, the Lecturer in Parasi-tology, who worked in
the room next to his.
'Come downstairs a minute,
Roger. But quietly - don't say anything.'
Dr Felton looked enquiring,
but Elke, grasping a tube of liver flukes in her mighty hand, only said: 'I
went down to the basement to use the centrifuge and - well, you'll see.'
Puzzled, he followed her
down two flights of stairs, to be met by Humphrey Fitzsimmons, the tall,
skeletally thin physiologist.
'She's still there,' he
whispered, putting a finger to his lips.
The Physiology lab was
bathed in Stygian gloom, yet at the far end of it they could make out a gleam
of brightness which revealed itself as a girl's abundant, loose and curling
hair. She was draped over the side of the sheep pen, entirely absorbed, and at
her feet was a straw basket which somehow suggested cornucopias and garlands
and the flower-picking orgies of Greek girls on the slopes of Parnassus.
But it wasn't the shining
hair, the girl's bent head, which held them. It was not even the unusual
attitude of the listening sheep. No, what kept the three silent watchers
transfixed, was the girl's voice. She was reciting poetry and she was doing it
in German.
All of them, to some
extent, were familiar with the German language. It came daily from the wireless
in Hitler's obscene and hysterical rantings. As scientists they had waded
through pages of it in various Zeitschriften, hoping to be rewarded,
after interminable clauses, by a single verb.
But this… That German could
sound so caressing, so lilting, so… loving. Dr Elke closed her eyes and was
back in the wooden house on the white strand of Oland while her mother arranged
harebells in a pottery jug. Humphrey Fitzsimmons, too upper class to have seen
much of his mother, recalled the soft eyes of the water spaniel he'd owned as a
boy. And Dr Felton remembered that his wife, whose red-rimmed eyes followed him
in incessant reproach because they couldn't start a baby, had once been a
snowflake in the Monte Carlo Ballet with a borrowed Russian name and an
endearing smile.
The girl's voice grew ever
softer, and ceased. She picked up her basket and bade the sheep farewell. Then,
turning, she saw them.
'Oh, I'm sorry,' she said
in English. 'But I swear I haven't touched her - not even with one finger. I
swear by Mozart's head!'
'It doesn't matter,' said
Fitzsimmons, still bemused. 'She's not being used for anything. She was
supposed to be part of a batch to use for a government feeding trial, but they
cancelled it after Munich and the rest of the animals never turned up.'
'What was the poem?' Dr
Elke asked.
'It's by Goethe. It's
called "The Wanderer's Night Song". It's a bit sad, but I suppose
great poems always are and it's a very rural sort of sadness with
mountains and birdsong and peace.'
Dr Felton now came down to
earth and assumed the mantle of Senior Lecturer, Tutor for Admissions and
Acting
Dr Felton now came down to
earth and assumed the mantle of Senior Lecturer, 'Tutor for Admissions and Acting
Head (in the continuing absence of his Professor) of the Department of Zoology.
'Are you by any chance Miss Berger?' Because if so, I've been expecting you.'
Half an hour later, in Dr
Felton's room, the technicalities of Ruth's admission were under way.
'Oh, it will be lovely!'
she said. 'Everything I like! I've always wanted to do Marine Zoology. In
Vienna we didn't do it because there was no sea, of course, and I've only been
to the Baltic which is all straight lines and people lying in the sand with nothing
on reading Schopenhauer.'
Her arms flew upwards, tier
cheeks blew out, as she mimed a portly nudist holding a heavy book above his
head,
'Well, that's settled your
basic subjects then,' said Dr Felton. 'Parasitology, Physiology and Marine
Biology. Which leaves you with your special option. With your father's record I
imagine that'll be Palaeontology?'
For a moment, Ruth
hesitated and Dr Felton, already aware that silence was not Miss Berger's
natural stale, looked up from the form he'd been completing.
'Professor Somerville
teaches that himself,' he went on. 'It's usually oversubscribed but I think we
could squeeze you in. He's a quite brilliant lecturer.'
'May I take it, then? Would
it be all right?'
'I'm sure it will be.
There's a field course too; we usually have it in the spring, but with the
Professor having been away we're holding it in October.'
He frowned because the
field course was officially lull, the last place having been taken by Verena
Plackett a few days before, but Dr Felton did not intend to let this stop him.
There were no nudists leading Schopenhauer on the curving, foam-fringed sands
of Bowmont Bay.
'I don't think I'll be able
to go to that. 'The Quakers are paying my fee;; but there won't be anything
extra (or navel. My parents arc very poo* now.'
'Well, we'll see,' said Dr
Felton. There was a hardship fund administered by the Finance Committee on
which he sat, but it was better to say nothing yet.
'You are so kind,' she
said, lacing her fingers in her lap. 'You can't imagine what it means to be
here after… what happened. I remember it all so well, you know. The smells and
everything: formalin and alcohol and chalk… I didn't think I should come to
university, I thought I should work for my parents, but now I'm here I don't
think anything could get me away again.'
'It was bad?'
She shrugged. 'One of my
friends was thrown down the steps of the university and broke his leg. But here
it is all going on still, people trying to understand the world, needing to
know about things…'
'Sea slugs,' said Dr Felton
a trifle bitterly. 'They won't even reproduce!'
'Ah, but that's difficult…
compatibility.' She glanced up, testing the word, and he marvelled again at her
command of English. 'Even in people it's difficult and if one is both male and
female at the same time that cannot be easy.'
Dr Felton agreed, obscurely
comforted, and sent her to the Union where one of the third years was waiting
to show newcomers round. When she had left, accompanying her handshake with
that half-curtsy which proclaimed the abandoned world of Central Europe, he
drew her form towards himand looked at it with satisfaction. Quin was always
complaining that students these days were without personality. He'd hardly be
able to level that charge at his new Honours student. Quin, in fact, would be
very pleased. Whether he would feel the same about Verena Plackett, whose
application form lay beneath Ruth's, was another matter.
'Veil?' said Mrs Weiss, and
cocked her head in its feathered toque at Ruth, determined to extract every ounce
of information about her first day at college.
'It's going to be
wonderful,' said Ruth, setting a pot of coffee in front of the old lady, for
she had not yet given up her evening job at the Willow Tea Rooms.
Everyone was in the .cafe,
including her own family, for Ruth's return to her rightful place among the
intelligentsia demanded celebration and discussion. They had heard about the
niceness of Dr Felton, the majesty of Dr Elke and her parasites, the beauty of
the river and the Goethe-loving sheep.
'And Professor Somerville?'
enquired her father, who had only just arrived, for on Fridays the library
stayed open late.
'He isn't back yet. He went
to Scotland to try and join the navy,' said Ruth, frowning over the slice of
guggle she was bringing to Dr Levy. She had been certain that a man of thirty
should not have to go to war. 'But everyone says he is the most amazing
lecturer.'
The lady with the poodle
now arrived, and in deference to her the conversation changed to English.
'You haf met the students?'
Paul Ziller enquired.
'Only one or two,' said
Ruth, vanishing momentarily into the kitchen to fetch the actor's fruit juice.
'But there's a girl starting at the same time as me - Verena Plackett. She's
the daughter of the Vice Chancellor and I expect she could choose any course
she liked, but she's doing the Palaeontology option too which shows how good it
is.'
Ziller put down his cup.
'Wait!' he said, raising a majestic hand.'Her I haf seen!'
The eyes of the entire
clientele were upon him.
'How haf you seen?'
enquired Leonie.
Ziller rose and made his
way to the wicker table on which lay the piles of magazines which the Misses
Maud and Violet, bowing to the need of the refugees for the printed word, now
brought downstairs. Ignoring Woman and Woman's Own provided
by the poodle-owning lady, and Home Chat, the contribution of Mrs
Burtt, he sorted through the copies of Country Life, selected the
issue he wanted, and began to turn the pages.
Considerable tension was by
now generated, and Mrs Burtt and Miss Violet came out of the kitchen to watch.
'Hah!' said Ziller
triumphantly, and held up the relevant page.
In the front of Country
Life there is always a full-page photograph of a girl, invariably well
bred, frequently about to marry someone suitable, but whether engaged or not,
presenting a prototype of upper-class womanhood. Here are the Fenella
Holdinghams who, in the spring, will marry the youngest son of Lord and Lady
Foister; here the Angela Lathanby-Gores after their victory in the Highlingham
Steeplechase… And here now was Verena Plackett - daughter of the newly
appointed Vice Chancellor of Thameside - and not just Verena Plackett, but
Verena Plackett gowned for presentation at Their Majesties' courts in
flesh-coloured satin with a train embroidered in lover's knots of diamante, and
ostrich feathers in her hair.
Ruth, putting down her
tray, was awarded first look, and studied her fellow student with attention.
'She looks intelligent,'
she said.
Passed round, Verena seemed
to give general satisfaction. Ziller liked her long throat, von Hofmann praised
her collar bones and Miss Maud said she'd have known her anywhere for a
Croft-Ellis by her nose. Only Mrs Burtt was silent, giving a small sniff which
it was easy to attribute to class hatred.
But it was Leonie who
looked longest at the picture and who, when she left the cafe, asked if she
could borrow the magazine.
'I'm not a snob,' she said
to her husband, who smiled a wise and matrimonial smile, 'but to have Ruth back
where she belongs… Oh, Kurt, that is so good.’
It was not till Ruth had
gone to bed that Leonie set up her ironing board for she did not want her
daughter to know how long she worked, or for how little money. But as she
smoothed the fussy ruffles and frills on Mrs Carter's blouse, she was humming a
silly waltz she'd danced to in her girlhood and presently she put down the iron
and once more examined Verena's face.
She did not look
particularly affable, but who did when confronted by a camera, and if her mouth
turned down at the corners, this was probably some inherited trait and did not
indicate ill temper. What mattered was that Ruth was back where she belonged.
The daughter of a Vice Chancellor was an entirely suitable companion for the
daughter of an erstwhile Dean of the Faculty of Science.
Not I but thou… the refrain of
all cradle songs, all prayers with which parents, ungrudging, send their
children forth to a better life than their own, rang through Leonie's head.
Verena and Ruth would be the greatest of friends - Leonie was quite sure of it
- and nothing, that night, could upset her; not even the smell of burning
lentils as the psychoanalyst from Breslau began, at midnight, to cook soup.
Within three days of the
beginning of term, Ruth was thoroughly at home at Thameside. To reach the
university, she had to walk across Waterloo Bridge and that was like getting a
special blessing for the coming day. There was always something to delight her:
a barge passing beneath her with washing strung across the deck, or a flock of
gulls jostling and screeching for the bread thrown by a bundled old woman who
looked poor beyond belief, but was there each day to share her loaf- and once a
double rainbow behind St Paul's,
'And it always smells of
the sea,' she told Dr Felton, who was becoming not only her tutor but a friend.
'The rivers in Europe don't do that - well, how could they with the ocean so
far away?'
Dr Felton was a fine
teacher, an enthusiast who shared with his students the amazing life of his
creatures.
'Look!' he would cry like a
child as he found, under the microscope, a cluster of transparent eggs from a
brittle star, or the flagellum with which some infinitely small creature hurled
itself across a drop of liquid. As she prepared slides and made her diagrams,
Ruth was in a world where there was no barrier between science and art. Nor
could anyone be indifferent to the extraordinarily successful lives led by Dr
Elke's tapeworms, untroubled by the search for food or shelter - living,
loving, having their entire being in the secure world of someone else's gut.
But if the staff were kind,
and the work absorbing, it was her fellow students who made Ruth's first days
at Thameside so happy. They had worked together for two years, but they
welcomed her without hesitation. There was Sam Marsh, a thin tousle-haired boy
with the face of an intelligent rat, who wore a flat cap and a muffler to show
his solidarity with the proletariat, and Janet Carter, a cheerful vicar's
daughter with frizzy red hair, whose innumerable boyfriends, of an evening,
fell off sofas, got their feet stuck in the steering wheels of motor
cars and generally came to grief in their efforts to attain their goal. There
was a huge, silent Welshman (but not called Morgan) who was apt to crush test
tubes unwittingly in his enormous hands… And there was Pilly.
Pilly's name was Priscilla
Yarrowby, but the nickname had stuck to her since her schooldays for her father
was a manufacturer of aspirins. Pilly had short, curly, light brown hair and
round blue eyes which usually wore a look of desperate incomprehension. She had
failed every exam at least once, she wept over her dissections, she fainted at
the sight of blood. The discovery that Ruth, who looked like a goose girl in a
fairy tale, knew exactly what she was doing, filled Pilly with amazement and
awe. That this romantic newcomer (with whom Sam was already obviously in love)
was willing to help her with her work and to do so tactfully and unobtrusively,
produced an onrush of uncontainable gratitude. Within forty-eight hours of
Ruth's arrival, it became almost impossible to prise poor Pilly from her side.
To the general niceness of
the students there was one glaring exception. Verena Plackett's arrival for the
first lecture of term was one which Ruth never forgot.
She was sitting with her
new friends, when the door opened and a college porter entered, placed a notice
saying Reserved in the middle of the front bench, and departed again,
looking cross. Since the lecture was to be given by Dr Fitzsimmons, the
gangling, rather vague Physiology lecturer and was attended only by his
students, this caused surprise, for Dr Fitzsimmons was not really a puller-in
of crowds.
A few minutes passed, after
which the door opened once more and a tall girl in a navy-blue tailored coat
and skirt entered, walked to the Reserved notice, removed it, and sat
down. She then opened her large crocodile-skin briefcase and took out a morocco
leather writing case from which she removed a thick pad of vellum paper, an
ebony ruler, a black fountain pen with a gold nib and a silver propelling
pencil. Next, she zipped up the writing case again, put it back into the
briefcase, shut the briefcase - and was ready to begin. Dr Fitzsimmons had
decided to start with an outline of the human digestive system. Moving slowly
from the salivary glands of the mouth to the peristaltic movements of the
oesophagus, he reached the stomach itself which he drew on the blackboard,
occasionally breaking the chalk. And as he spoke, or drew, so did Verena follow
him. There was no word that Dr Fitzsimmons uttered that she did not write down
in her large, clear script; no "and" or "but" she omitted.
Then, at five minutes to ten, she wound down the lead of her propelling pencil,
screwed on the top of her fountain pen, opened the briefcase, unzipped the
morocco leather writing case… But even when all her belongings were back in
place, Verena did not at once follow the other students into the practical
class, for she knew how gratifying it must be for a member of staff to have the
Vice Chancellor's daughter in the audience - and approaching the dais where Dr
Fitzsimmons, lightly covered in chalk, was obliterating the human stomach, she
stepped towards him.
'You will have gathered who
I am,' she said, graciously holding out her hand, 'but I feel I should thank
you on behalf of my parents and myself for your interesting lecture.'
It was not till she entered
the Physiology lab that Verena was compelled to communicate with her fellow
students. Waiting on the benches were a number of coiled rubber tubes, each
with a syringe on one end, and a slightly daunting set of instructions. Swallow
the tube as far as the white mark and remove the contents of the stomach for
analysis, they began. The demonstrator, a friendly young man, came forward
helpfully. 'You will have to work in pairs,' he said. And to Verena: 'Since
you're new, Miss Plackett, I thought you might like to work with Miss Berger
who's started this year also.'
Ruth turned and smiled at
Verena. She would have preferred to work with Pilly who was looking at her
beseechingly, or with Sam, but she was more than ready to be friendly.
Verena, in silence, stood
and looked down at Ruth. There had been a row in Belsize Park after Ruth's
acceptance at
Thameside. Leonie had
announced her intention of selling the diamond brooch she had secreted in her
corset and kitting Ruth out for college, and Ruth had refused to hear of it.
'There'll be much more important things to spend money on,' she'd said firmly.
This morning, accordingly,
Ruth wore a lavender smock printed with small white daisies to protect her
loden skirt — the property of Miss Violet who had a number of such garments in
which to serve tea at the Willow. It was not what Ruth would have chosen to
wear in a laboratory, but she had accepted gratefully, as she had accepted the
virulently varnished pencil box decorated with pink hearts which Mrs Burtt had
bought for her from Woolworth's. Also in Ruth's straw basket was her lunch - a
bread roll in a paper bag - and a bunch of dandelions she had picked to give
the sheep in the basement; and her hair, piled high on her head for purposes of
experimentation, was bound by a piece of Uncle Mishak's gardening twine.
At this extremely
unscientific apparition, Verena stared for a few moments in perhaps justifiable
distress.
Then she said: 'I think it
would be inadvisable for two newcomers to work together.'
The snub was unmistakable. Ruth
flushed and turned away, and Verena proceeded to don a snow-white and perfectly
starched lab coat before she decided on the partner of her choice. The group
round Miss Berger was obviously unsuitable and a possible candidate - a
handsome, fair-haired young man - moved away to another bench before she could
catch his eyes. But hovering rather flatteringly near her was a nicely
turned-out youth, tall and thin, with sandy hair which he kept short and under
control.
'What about you?' she said
to Kenneth Easton. She had made an excellent choice. Kenneth, who watched birds
(but only if they were rare) was a conscientious, painstaking young man who now
saw his career take off under this august patronage and moved eagerly to her
side.
'I hope she chokes to death,'
said Sam viciously, looking across at Verena. But of course she didn't. While
the sycophantic Kenneth stood beside her, ready to receive the contents of her
stomach, Verena lifted the rubber tube to her mouth - and calmly, competently,
in a series of python-like gulps, she swallowed it.
Because there were so many
more men than women at Thameside, and because they were so very disposed to be
friendly, Ruth told everyone early on about Heini: that he was coming, that he
was incredibly gifted, that she meant -after she got her degree - to spend her
life with him.
'What's he like?' asked
Janet.
'He's got curly dark hair
and grey eyes and he plays like no one else in the world. You'll hear him when
he comes -at least you will when I've got the piano.'
Heini's existence was a
blow to Sam, but he took it well, deciding to play a Lancelot-like role in
Ruth's life which would be better for his degree than a public passion - and
he, and all Ruth's friends, quite understood that if Ruth only joined those
clubs that were free, or refused to come to The Angler's Arms after college, it
was because any spare money she might collect in tips at the Willow had to go
into Heini's jam jar. And soon even Huw Davies (the Welshman who was not called
Morgan) could be seen staring into the windows of piano shops, for there is
nothing more infectious than involvement in a noble cause.
Afterwards, Ruth wished
that there hadn't been that week at the beginning of term when Quin was not yet
back from Scotland. She heard too much about Professor Somerville's
achievements, his intelligence, the wonderful things he had done for his
students.
'I'd give my soul to be
taken on one of his trips,' said Sam, 'but I haven't a chance; not even if I
got a First. There's always a queue of people waiting to go.'
Even Janet, who had such a
poor opinion of the male sex and continued to bite the heads off her
unsuccessful suitors in the manner of the wind spider in the Natural History
Museum, spoke well of him.
'His lectures are really
good - he sort of opens up the world for you. And there's absolutely no side to
him. It makes my blood boil to hear Verena go on as though she owns him - she
hasn't even met him!'
But it was from Pilly that
Ruth heard most about Professor Somerville. Priscilla might be unable to grasp
the concept of radial symmetry in the jellyfish, but her loving heart made her
perceptive and skilful where the needs of her friends were concerned, and she
now decided that Ruth was not getting enough lunch.
This was true. Ruth had
told Leonie that lunch in the refectory was free. She then got off the tube
three stops early, used the tuppence she saved to buy a bread roll, and ate it
by the river. Ruth was entirely satisfied with this arrangement, but Pilly was
not, and on Ruth's third day at Thameside she asked if she might bring a picnic
and join her.
'Wouldn't you rather go
into the refectory?'
'No, I wouldn't. The food
doesn't agree with me,' lied Pilly.
She then went home and
consulted her mother. Mr Yarrowby did not just make aspirins, he made a great
many of them. Priscilla was driven to college in a Rolls Royce which dropped
her two streets away because she was shy about her wealth, but her mother was a
down-to-earth Yorkshire woman. Mrs Yarrowby had never been overcome by pigeons
in the Stephansplatz, but she and Leonie were sisters under the skin.
'Oh dear!' said Pilly,
opening her lunch box on the following day. 'I can't possibly eat all that -
and if I leave anything my mother will be so hurt!"
That was a cry to which
Ruth couldn't help rallying. Leonie's desperate face when she stopped at one
helping of sauerkraut had been a feature of her childhood. She shared Pilly's
flaky meat patties, the hard-boiled eggs, the parkin, the grapes… and even then
there were crusts over to throw to the greedy birds which gave Ruth a special
happiness.
'Oh, Pilly, you can't
imagine how lovely it is to be able to feed the ducks again. It makes
me feel like a real and proper person, not a refugee.'
'You'd always be a real and
proper person,' said Pilly staunchly. 'You're the most real and proper person
I've ever met.'
But it was as they sat
leaning against the parapet with Ruth's loden cloak wrapped round their
shoulders against the wind, that Ruth learnt how much Pilly dreaded the onset
of the Palaeontology course.
'I'll never get through,'
she said miserably. 'I can't even tell the difference between Pleistocene and
plasticine.'
'Yes you can… But, Pilly,
why do you have to take that option? I mean, there are rather a lot of names.'
Pilly looked depressed and
threw another crust, into the water. 'It's to do with Professor Somerville.'
There was a pause. Then:
'How is that? How is it to do with him?'
'My father thinks he's the
perfect Renaissance man,' said Pilly. 'You know, he does everything. My father
saw him on a newsreel about three years ago when he came back from Java with
the skull of that Neanderthal lady and some other time when he was riding
through Nepal on a yak. Or maybe it was a mule. You see my father had to go
into a factory at fourteen and he never had a chance to do a degree or travel -
that's why he's pushing me through college though I told him I was too stupid.
And Professor Somerville is the sort of person he wants to have been.'
'I see,'
'He cuts all the articles
about him out of the National Geographic. And then there's the sailing
- Professor Somerville won some race in a dinghy with the sea banging about
over his head and my father liked that too. And he's a Great Lover, like the
Medicis, though I don't suppose he poisons people so much.'
'How do your parents know
he's a Great Lover?'
Pilly sighed. 'It's in the
papers. In the gossip columns. An actress called Tansy Mallet chased him all
over Egypt and. now he's got some stunningly beautiful Frenchwoman he takes to
the theatre - and everyone's always trying to get him to take them on
field trips. You wait till he gets back - his lectures are always absolutely
packed with people from the outside. They pay the university ten pounds a year
and they can go to any lecture, but it's his they go to.' She bit into her
sandwich. 'And there's Bowmont too.'
'What's Bowmont?'
'It's where Professor
Somerville lives. You'll see when we go on the field course.'
'I'm not going on the field
course,' said Ruth. 'But what's so special about Bowmont? I thought it was just
a house with no central heating?'
Pilly shook her head. 'It
can't be because Turner painted it.'
'Well, he painted a lot of
things, didn't he? Cows and sunsets and shipwrecks?'
'Maybe - but everyone wants
to go there all the same. Oh, Ruth, I'll never do it. All those names -
Jurassic and Mesozoic and on and on… '
'You will do it,' said
Ruth, setting her jaw. 'We'll make lists - a list for the bathroom, a list for
the lavatory… I expect you've got a lot of bathrooms so you can have a lot of
lists and I'll hear you every day. They're only names like people
being called Cynthia or George.'
The weather was fine that
first week at Thameside and for Ruth everything was a delight. Dr Felton's
lectures, the first rehearsal of the Bach Choir which cost nothing to join and
sent the sound of the B Minor Mass soaring over the campus. She coached Pilly,
she made friends with a Ph.D. student in the German Department and persuaded
him that Rilke, when properly spoken, was not a madman but a poet - and she was
faithful to the sheep.
Yet if her happiness was
real, it could be fractured in an instant by a reminder of the past. One
afternoon she was crossing the courtyard on the way back from a seminar when
she heard, coming from a window of the Arts Block the sound of the Schubert
Quartet in E flat. She stood still for a moment, making sure that she was
right, that it was the Zillers who were playing, and it was: they
always took the Adagio with that heavenly slowness which had nothing to do with
solemnity. And now the second violin lifted itself above the others to repeat
the motif and she could see Biberstein's dark curls standing on end and his
chin pressed against his fiddle as he looked into the eye of Schubert, or of
God. Then she ran across the grass, through the archway, up the stairs… She
knew, of course, before she opened the door of the Common Room, she knew it was
impossible. Time had not run backward, she was not crossing the Johannesgasse
towards the windows of the Conservatoire where the Zillers practised. But there
were a few seconds while her body believed what her brain knew to be impossible
- and then she saw the horn of the gramophone and the members of the Music Club
sitting in a circle - and knew that the past was past, and Biberstein was dead.
It was on the following day
that Verena was gracious enough to inform her fellow students that Professor
Somerville would be back to give his Palaeontology lecture on Monday.
'Are you sure?' asked Sam.
'Certainly I'm sure,' said
Verena. 'He is to dine with us that night.'
'My God, Ruth, what is the
matter with your hair?' said Leonie as her daughter appeared for breakfast on
the morning that Professor Somerville was due to give his first lecture.
'I have plaited it,' said
Ruth with dignity.
'Plaited it? You have
tortured it; you will be skinned, pulling it back like that.'
But Ruth, in pursuit of a
total unobtrusiveness, said that she felt quite comfortable and asked if she
could borrow Hilda's raincoat which was black, mannish and in its dotage. With
the collar turned up and a beret jammed on her head, she felt certain she could
escape Professor Somerville's notice until he wished to acknowledge her, and
ignoring her mother, who said that she looked like a streetwalker in an
experimental film by Pabst, she made her way to college. There she came under
attack again. Janet pointed out that it wasn't raining, and Sam asked sadly if
her hairstyle was permanent. But if Ruth's appearance was odd, her behaviour
was odder.
'Are you all right?' asked
Pilly as Ruth edged into the lecture theatre like the musk rat Chu Chundra in
Kipling's The Jungle Book, who never ventured into the middle of a
room.
'Yes, I am. Well, I feel a
bit sick actually, so I think I'll sit in the back row today in case I have to
go out. But you go on down and get a good seat.'
This was a stupid remark.
Where Ruth went, there Pilly went too, and presently Janet, Sam and Huw came to
join them.
'It doesn't matter,' said
Sam, resigning himself to being a long way from his idol. 'You can always hear
what he says.'
The lecture theatre was
packed. Not only students from other years but from other disciplines had come
to listen, and the external students Pilly had described: housewives, old
ladies, and a red-faced colonel with a handlebar moustache.
'Ah, here comes Verena,'
said Janet. 'Could those curvaceous sausages on her forehead be in honour of the
Prof?'
Verena did indeed have a
new hairstyle, though the suit she wore was tailor-made as always, and the
high-necked blouse severe. Descending the tiered lecture theatre with her
crocodile skin briefcase, she found herself faced with an unexpected hitch. Her
seat in the centre of the front row was filled.
There had been some
unpleasantness about the college porter who was supposed to place the Reserved
notice for Verena before lectures. He had complained to the bursar, saying that
this was not part of his duties, and the bursar, who was probably in the pay of
the unions, had supported him. So far this had not mattered since everyone now
understood what was due to her, but today, with the place full of outsiders,
the entire row was packed.
Anyone else might be
deterred, but not Lady Plackett's daughter.
'Excuse me,' she said - and
holding the briefcase aloft, she passed along the row, stopping at the point
where she was directly under the rostrum and facing the carafe of water. This
was where she always sat and where she intended most particularly to sit today.
With her behind poised
expectantly, Verena waited, ready to sink into her appointed place - and did
not wait in vain. Such was the authority, the breeding exerted even by her
posterior, that the woman on the right edged closer to her neighbour, the
student on the left, with only a mutter or two, pushed himself against his
friend - and with a polite 'Thank you', Verena sat down, opened her briefcase,
took out the vellum notepad and the gold-nibbed fountain pen, and was ready to
begin.
Quin entered the lecture
theatre, put a single sheet of paper on the desk, moved the carafe out of the
way, looked up to say 'Good morning' - and instantly saw Ruth, sitting as low
as it was possible in the back row. She was partly obscured by a
broad-shouldered man in the row in front of her, but the triangular face, the
big smudged eyes, stood out perfectly clearly, as did an area of nakedness
where her hair wasn't. For an instant he thought she had cut it off and felt an
irregularity in his heart beat as if his parasympathetic nerves had intended to
send a message of protest and thought better of it, partly because it was none
of his business, and partly because she hadn't. Evidently she expected rain,
for he could see the pigtail vanishing into her coat, and was reminded of the
museum in Vienna and the water dropping from her hair the day he fetched her
for their wedding.
These thoughts, if that was
what they were, lasted a few seconds at the most, and were followed by another,
equally brief, as he wondered why University College was sending their students
to his lectures and made a note to stop them doing so. Then he picked up a
piece of chalk, went to the blackboard - and began.
Ruth never forgot the next
hour. If someone had told her that she would follow a lecture on ancestor
descendant sequences in fossil rocks as though it was a bed-time story - as
riveting, as extraordinary, at times as funny, as any fairy tale
- she would not have
believed them.
The subject was highly
technical. Quin was reassessing the significance of Rowe's work on Micraster in
the English chalk, relating it to Darwin's theories and the new ideas of Julian
Huxley. Yet as he spoke - never raising his voice, making only an occasional
gesture with those extraordinarily expressive hands, she felt a contact that
was almost physical. It was as if he was behind her, nudging her forward
towards the conclusion he was about to reach, letting her get there almost
before him, so that she felt, yes… yes, of course it has to be like
that!
All around Ruth, the others
sat equally rapt. Sam had laid down his pen; few of the students took more than
an occasional note because to miss even one word was unthinkable
- and anyway they knew that
afterwards they would read and read and even, somehow, make the necessary
journeys… that they would become part of the adventure that was unfolding up
there on the dais. Only Verena still wrote with her gold-nibbed pen on her
vellum pad - wrote and wrote and wrote.
Halfway through, pausing
for a moment, raking his hair in a characteristic gesture of which he was
unaware, Quin found himself looking once more directly at Ruth. She had given
up her Chu Chundra attitude and was leaning forward, one finger held sideways
across her mouth in what he remembered as her listening attitude. The pigtail,
too, had given up anonymity: a loop had escaped over her collar like a bracelet
of Scythian gold.
Then he found his word and
the lecture continued.
At exactly five minutes to
the hour, he began on the recapitulation, laid the unravelled controversy once
more before them - and was done.
He had not taken more than
a few steps before he was surrounded. Old students came to welcome him back,
new ones to greet him. The red-faced colonel reminded him that they had met in
Simla, shy housewives hovered.
Verena waited quietly, not
wishing to be lost in the crowd. Only when the Professor finally made his way
to the door did she intercept him with a few powerful strides and gave him news
which she knew must please him.
'I am,' she said, 'Verena
Plackett!'
'What do you mean, you've
admitted her?'
Dr Felton sighed. He'd been
so pleased to see the Professor a couple of hours ago. Somerville's arrival
lifted the spirits of everyone in the department; the breeze of cheerfulness
and enterprise he brought was almost tangible, yet now Felton rose, as if in
respect to Quin's rank, and wondered what was supposed to be the matter.
'I've told you… sir,' he
began - and Quin frowned, for the 'sir' meant that he had put Roger down harder
than he had intended. 'University College gave her place to someone and they
rang round to see if anyone could have her. I thought we might squeeze her in
and I knew you were in favour of taking refugees wherever possible.'
'Not this one. She must
go.'
'But why? She's an
excellent student. You may think that being pretty and having all that hair and
talking to the sheep -'
'Talking to the sheep}
What sheep?'
'It was sent down by the
Cambridge Research Institute and now they don't want it back.' He explained,
trying to work out why the Prof, who had come in in the morning in the best of
tempers, was now so stuffy and irascible. 'It's lonely and Ruth recites poetry
to it. Goethe mostly. There's one called "The Wanderer's Night Song"
it likes particularly, only it sounds different in German, of course.' And
catching sight of the Professor's face: 'But what I'm saying is that though
she's original and… and, well, emotional, she's very good at her work. Her
dissections are excellent, and her experimental technique.'
'I dare say, but you'll
have to get her transferred.'
'I can't. There isn't
anywhere. UC tried all sorts of places before they came to us. And honestly I
don't understand what all this is about,' said Roger, abandoning respect. 'The
whole of London is riddled with refugees you've found work for - what about the
old monster you wished on the library of the Geographical Society - Professor
Zinlinsky who looks up the skirts of all the girls? And your aunt called in
when she was here for the Chelsea Flower Show and she says it's just as bad in
Northumberland - some opera singer of yours trying to milk cows - and now you
try and turn out one of the most promising students we've had. Of course it's
early days, but both Elke and I think she has a chance of beating Verena
Plackett in the exams. She's the only one who's got a hope.'
'Who's Verena Plackett?'
'The VC's daughter. Didn't
she come and thank you for your excellent lecture?'
'Yes, she did,' said Quin
briefly. 'Look, I'm sorry but I'm not prepared to argue about this. I'm sure
O'Malley will take her down in Tonbridge. He owes me a favour.'
'For God's sake, that's an
hour on the train. She's saving for Heini's piano and - '
'Oh she is, is she? I mean,
who the devil is Heini?'
'He's her boyfriend; he's
on his way from Budapest and I don't mind telling you that I think he ought to
get his own piano; she doesn't have any lunch because of him, and-'
'My God, Roger, don't tell
me you've fallen for the girl.'
He had seriously hurt
Felton's feelings. Roger's spectacle frames darkened, he scowled. 'I have never
in my life got mixed up with a student and I never will; you ought to know
that. Even if I wasn't married, I wouldn't. I have the lowest possible opinion
of people who use their position to mess about with undergraduates.'
'Yes, I do know it; I'm
sorry, I shouldn't have said that. But you see I knew the Bergers pretty well
when I was in Vienna; I stayed with them one summer when Ruth was a child. It's
entirely unsuitable that she should be in my class.'
Felton's brow cleared. 'Oh,
if that's all… Good heavens, who cares about that?'
'I do.'
'I suppose you think you
might mark her up in exams, but I shouldn't have thought there was much
likelihood of that,' said Felton bitterly. 'You probably won't even be here
when it's time to do the marking.'
'All right, you have a
point. However - '
'She's good for
us,' said Felton, speaking with more emotion than Quin had heard in him. 'She's
so grateful to be allowed to study, she reminds the others of what a privilege
it is to be at university. You know how cynical these youngsters can get, how
they grumble. We too, I suppose, and suddenly here's someone who looks down a
microscope as though God had just lowered a slide of paramecium down from
heaven. And she's helping that poor little aspirin girl who always fails
everything.'
'Exactly how long has Miss
Berger been here?' asked Quin, whose ill temper seemed to be worsening with
every minute.
'A week. But what has that
to do with anything? You know perfectly well that one can tell the first time
someone picks up a pipette whether they're going to be any good.'
'Nevertheless, she's
leaving,' said Quin, tight-lipped.
'Then you tell her,' said
Dr Felton, defying his superior for the first time in his life.
'I will,' said Quin, his
face like thunder. At the door, he turned, remembering something he needed.
'Can you let me have the figures for last year's admissions as soon as
possible? The VC wants them.'
Felton nodded. 'I've almost
done them. They'll be ready for you this evening - I swear by Mozart's head.'
Quin spun round. ''What
did you say?'
Roger blushed. 'Nothing.
Just a figure of speech.'
The room occupied by the
Professor of Vertebrate Zoology was on the second floor and looked out over the
walnut tree to the facade of the Vice Chancellor's Lodge and the arch with its
glimpse of the river. The pieces of a partly assembled plesiosaur lay jumbled
in a sand tray; the skull of an infant mastodon held down a pile of reprints.
By the window, wearing a printed wool scarf left behind by his Aunt Frances,
stood a life-sized model of Daphne, a female hominid from Java presented to
Quin by the Oriental Exploration Society. The single, long-stemmed red rose in
a vase on his desk had been placed there by his secretary, Hazel, an
untroubling, middle-aged and happily married lady who could have run the
department perfectly well without the interference of her superiors, and
frequently did.
Ruth, summoned to the
Professor's room, had come in still filled with the happiness his lecture had
given her. Now she stood before him with bent head, trying to hold back her
tears.
'But why} Why must
I go? I don't understand.'
'Ruth, I've told you. In my
old college in Cambridge members of staff weren't even allowed to have
wives, let alone bring them into college. It's quite out of the question that I
should teach someone I'm married to.'
'But you aren't married to
me!' she said passionately. 'Not properly. You do nothing except send me pieces
of paper about not being married. There is epilepsy and being your sister and a
nun. And the thing about not consuming… or consummating or whatever it is.'
'It won't do, my dear,
believe me. With the old VC we might have got away with it, but not with the
Placketts. The scandal would be appalling. I'd have to resign which actually I
don't mind in the least, but you'd be dragged into it and start your life under
a cloud. Not to mention the delay to our freedom if we were known to have met
daily.'
'All those things with C in
them, you mean,' said Ruth. Fluent though her English was, the legal language
was taking its toll. 'Collusion and… what is it… ? Connivance? Consent?'
'Yes, all those things.
Look, leave this to me. I'm pretty sure I can get you on to the course down in
Kent. They don't do Honours but -'
'I don't want to go away.'
Her voice was low, intense. She had moved over to the window and one hand went
out to rest on Daphne's arm as though seeking a sister in distress. 'I don't want
to! Everyone is so kind here. There's Pilly who has to be a scientist because
her father saw you striding about on a newsreel with yaks and that's not
her fault, and I've promised Sam that I'd bring Paul Ziller to the Music Club
and Dr Felton's classes are so interesting and he has such trouble with his
wife wanting to have a baby and taking her temperature -'
'He told you that!' said
Quin, unable to believe his ears.
'No, not exactly - but Mrs
Felton came to fetch him and he was delayed and we began to talk. I'm not reserved,
you know, like the British. Of course, when we said our marriage should be a
secret, that was different. A secret is a secret, but otherwise… Even my
goat-herding grandmother used to tell people things. She would roll down her
stockings and say 'Look!' and you had to examine her varicose veins. She didn't
ask if you wanted to see her veins; she needed to show them. And, of course,
the Jewish side of me doesn't like distance at all, but it's different with you
because you are British and upper class and Verena Plackett is studying
Palaeontology so that she can marry you when we have been put asunder.'
Quin made a gesture of
impatience. 'Don't talk rubbish, Ruth. Now let's think how - '
'It isn't rubbish! She's
bought a new dress for the dinner party tonight because you're coming. It's
electric-blue taffeta with puffed sleeves. I know because the maid at the Lodge
is the porter's niece and he told me. Of course she is very tall but you could
wear your hair en brosse and - '
Quin took out his
handkerchief and wiped his brow. 'Ruth, I'm sorry; I know you've settled in but
- '
'Yes, I have!' she cried.
'There's so much here! Dr Elke showed me her bed bug eggs and they are
absolutely beautiful with a little cap on one end and you can see the eyes of
the young ones through the shell. And there's the river and the walnut tree - '
'And the sheep/ said Quin
bitterly.
'Yes, that too. But most of
all your lecture this morning. It opened such doors. Though I don't agree with
you absolutely about Hackenstreicher. I think he might have been perfectly
sincere when he said that -'
'Oh, you do,' said Quin,
not at all pleased. 'You think that a man who deliberately falsifies the
evidence to fit a preconceived hypothesis is to be taken seriously.'
'If it mas
deliberate. But my father had a paper which said that the skull they showed
Hackenstreicher could have been from much lower down in the sequence so that it
wouldn't be unreasonable for him to have come to the conclusions he
did.'
'Yes, I've read that paper,
but don't you see - '
Tempted to pursue the
argument, Quin forced himself back to the task that faced him. That Ruth would
have been an interesting student was not in question.
'Look, there's no sense in
postponing this. I shall ring O'Malley and get you transferred to Tonbridge and
until then you'd better stay away.'
She had turned her back and
was absently retying the scarf, with its motif of riding crops and bridles,
round Daphne's neck. In the continuing silence, Quin's disquiet grew. He
remembered suddenly the child on the Grundlsee reciting Keats… the way she had
tried to make a home even in the museum. Now he was banishing her again.
But when she turned to face
him, it was not the sad handmaiden of his musings that he saw, not Ruth in
tears amid the alien corn. Her chin was up, her expression obstinate and for a
moment she resembled the primitive, pugnacious hominid beside whom she stood.
'I can't stop you sending
me away because you are like God here; I saw that even before you came. But you
can't make me go to Tonbridge. I didn't intend to go to university, I thought I
should stay and work for my family. It-was you who said I should go and when I
thought you wanted me to come here I was so - ' She broke off and blew her
nose. 'But I won't start again somewhere else. I won't go to Tonbridge.'
'You will do exactly as you
are told,' he said furiously. 'You will go to Tonbridge and get a decent degree
and - '
'No, I won't. I shall go
and get a job, the best paid one I can find. If you had let me stay I would
have done everything you asked me; I would have been obedient and worked as
hard as I knew how and I would have been invisible because you would
have been my Professor and that would have been right. But now you can't bully
me. Now I am free.'
Quin rose from his chair.
'Let me tell you that even if I am not your Professor I am still legally your
husband and I can order you to go and - '
The sentence remained
unfinished as Quin, aghast, heard the words of Basher Somerville come out of
his own mouth.
Ruth put a last flourish to
the bow round Daphne's neck.
'You have read Nietzsche, I
see,' she said. 'When I go to a woman I take my whip. How suitable
that even the scarves your girlfriends leave behind have things on them for
beating horses.'
But Quin had had enough. He
went to the door, held it open.
'Now go,' he said. 'And quickly.'
The guest list for Lady
Plackett's first dinner party was one of which any hostess could be proud. A
renowned ichthyologist just back from an investigation of the bony fish in Lake
Titicaca, an art historian who was the world expert on Russian icons, a
philologist from the British Museum who spoke seven Chinese dialects and Simeon
LeClerque who had won a literary prize for his biography of Bishop Berkeley.
But, of course, the guest of honour, the person she had placed next to Verena,
was Professor Somerville whom she had welcomed back to Thameside earlier in the
day.
By six o'clock Lady
Plackett had finished supervising the work of the maids and the cook, and went
upstairs to speak to her daughter.
Verena had bathed earlier
and now sat in her dressing-gown at her desk piled high with books.
'How are you getting on,
dear?' asked Lady Plackett solicitously, for it always touched her, the way
Verena prepared for her guests.
'I'm nearly ready, Mummy. I
managed to get hold of Professor Somerville's first paper - the one on the
dinosaur pits of Tendaguru, and I've read all his books, of course. But I feel
I should just freshen up on ichthyology if I'm next to Sir Harold. He's just
back from South America, I understand.'
'Yes… Lake Titicaca. Only
remember, it's the bony fishes, dear.'
Sir Harold was married but
really very eminent and it was quite right for Verena to prepare herself for
him. 'I think we'll manage the Russian icons without trouble - Professor Frank
is said to be very talkative. If you have the key names…'
'Oh, I have those,' said
Verena calmly. 'Andrei Rublev… egg tempera… ' She glanced briefly at the notes
she had taken earlier. 'The effect of Mannerism becoming apparent in the
seventeenth century…'
Lady Plackett, not a
demonstrative woman, kissed her daughter on the cheek. 'I can always rely on
you.' At the doorway she paused. 'With Professor Somerville it would be in
order to ask a little about Bowmont… the new forestry act, perhaps: I shall, of
course, mention that I was acquainted with his aunt. And don't trouble about
Chinese phonetics, dear. Mr Fellowes was only a stop gap - he's that old man
from the British Museum and he's right at the other end of the table.'
Left alone, Verena applied
herself to the bony fishes before once again checking off Professor
Somerville's published works. He would not find her wanting intellectually,
that was for certain. Now it was time to attend to the other side of her
personality: not the scholar but the woman. Removing her dressing-gown, she
slipped on the blue taffeta dress which Ruth had described with perfect
accuracy and began to unwind the curlers from her hair.
'I found it fascinating,'
said Verena, turning her powerful gaze on Professor Somerville. 'Your views on
the value of lumbar curve measurements in recognizing hominids seem to me
entirely convincing. In the footnote to chapter thirteen you put that so well.'
Quin, encountering that
rare phenomenon, a person who read footnotes, was ready to be impressed. 'It's
still speculative, but interestingly enough they've come up with some
corroboration in Java. The American expedition…'
Verena's eyes flickered in
a moment of unease. She had not had time to read up Java.
'I understand that you have
just been honoured in Vienna,' she said, steering back to safer water. 'It must
have been such an interesting time to be there. Hitler seems to have achieved
miracles with the German economy.'
'Yes.' The crinkled smile
which had so charmed her had gone. 'He has achieved other miracles too, such as
the entire destruction of three hundred years of German culture.'
'Oh.' But this was a girl
who only needed to look at a hound puppy for it to sink to its stomach and
grovel - and she recovered her self-possession at once. 'Tell me, Professor
Somerville, what made you decide to start a field course at Bowmont?' '
'Well, the fauna on that
coast is surprisingly diverse, with the North Sea being effectively enclosed.
Then we're opposite the Fame Islands where the ornithologists have done some
very interesting work on breeding colonies - it was an obvious place for people
to get practical experience:'
'But you yourself? Your
discipline? You will be there also?'
'Of course. I help Dr
Felton with the Marine Biology but I also run trips up to the coal measures and
down to Staithes in Yorkshire.'
'And the students stay
separately - not in the house?'
'Yes. I've converted an old
boathouse and some cottages on the beach into a dormitory and labs. My aunt is
elderly; I wouldn't ask her to entertain my students and anyway they prefer to be
independent.'
Verena frowned, for she
could see problems ahead, but as the Professor looked as though he might turn
to the left, where Mrs LeClerque, the unexpectedly pretty wife of Bishop
Berkeley's biographer, was looking at him from under her lashes, she plunged
into praise of the morning's lecture.
'I was so intrigued by your
analysis of Dr Hackenstreicher's misconceptions. There seems no doubt that the
man was seriously deluded.'
'I'm glad you think so,'
said Quin, receiving boiled potatoes at the hands of a cold-looking
parlourmaid. 'Miss Berger seemed to find my views unreasonable.'
'Ah. But she is leaving us,
is she not?'
'Yes.'
'Mother was pleased to hear
it,' said Verena, glancing at Lady Plackett who was talking to an unexpected
last-minute arrival: a musicologist just returned from New York whose
acceptance had got lost in the post. 'I think she feels that there are too many
of them.'
'Them?' asked Quin with
lifted eyebrows.
'Well, you know…
foreigners… refugees. She feels that places should be kept for our own
nationals.'
Lady Plackett, who had been
watching benignly her daughter's success with the Professor, now abandoned
protocol to speak across the table.
'Well, of course, it
doesn't do to say so,' she said, 'but one can't help feeling that they've
rather taken over. Of course one can't entirely approve of what Hitler is
doing.'
'No,' said Quin. 'It would
certainly be difficult to approve of that.'
'But she is rather a
strange girl in any case,' said Verena.
'I mean, she talks to the
sheep. There is something whimsical in that; something unscientific'
'Jesus talked to them,'
said the philologist from the museum. An old man with a white beard, he spoke
with unexpected resolution.
'Well, yes, I suppose so.'
Verena conceded the point. 'But she recites to it in German.'
'What does she recite?'
asked the biographer of Bishop Berkeley.
'Goethe,' said Quin
briefly. He was growing weary of the saga of the sheep.' "The Wanderer's
Night Song" '.
The philologist approved.
'An excellent choice. Though perhaps one might have expected one of the
eighteenth-century pastoralists. Matthias Claudius perhaps?'
There followed a
surprisingly animated discussion on the kind of lyric verse which might, in the
German language, be expected to appeal to the domestic ungulates, and though
this was exactly the kind of scholarly canter which Lady Plackett believed in
encouraging, she listened to it with a frown.
'Wasn't Goethe the man who
kept falling in love with women called Charlotte?' asked the appealingly silly
wife of the biographer.
Quin turned to her with
relief. 'Yes, he was. He put it all in a novel called Werther where
the hero is so in love with a Charlotte that he kills himself. Thackeray wrote
a poem about it.'
'Was it a good poem?'
'Very good,' said Quin
firmly. 'It starts:
Werther had a love for
Charlotte
Such as words could never
utter;
Would you know how first he
met her?
She was cutting bread and
butter.
And it ends with him being
carried away on a shutter.' Verena, watching this descent into frivolity with a
puckered brow, now made a last attempt to bring Professor Somerville back to a
subject dear to her heart.
'When is Miss Berger
actually due to leave?' she asked.
'It isn't decided yet.'
He then turned resolutely
back to Mrs LeClerque who began to tell him about a friend of hers who had
become engaged to no less than three men called Henry, all of them unsuitable,
and Verena decided to do her duty by her other neighbour.
'Tell me, do you intend to
pursue your researches into the bony fishes here in England?' she enquired.
But for once her mother had
let her down. The last minute arrival of the musicologist had necessitated a
change in the seating arrangements. Blank-faced and astonished, the icon expert
gazed at her.
It was Quin's habit to
drive to Thameside in a large, midnight-blue Crossley tourer with brass lamps
and a deep horn which recalled, faintly, the motoring activities of the
redoubtable Mr Toad.
The day after the
Placketts' dinner party, parking the car under the archway, he was confronted
not by the usual throng shouting their 'Good mornings' but by two cold-looking
students holding up a ragged banner inscribed with the words: RUTH BERGER'S
DISMISSAL IS UNFAIR.
Safe in his room, he picked
up the phone. 'Get me O'Malley down in Tonbridge, will you please, Hazel?'
'Yes, Professor Somerville.
And Sir Lawrence Dempster phoned - he said would you ring him back as soon as
possible.'
'All right; I'll deal with
that first.'
By the time Quin had spoken
to the director of the Geophysical Society, it was too late to phone O'Malley,
who would be lecturing, and Quin applied himself to his correspondence till it
was time to go to the Common Room where Elke, crunching a custard cream between
her splendid teeth, brought up a subject he had declared to be closed.
'She wrote a first-class
essay for me after less than a week. And in what is, of course, not her native
language.'
'I'm not aware that Miss
Berger has any trouble with English,' said Quin. 'She has after all been to an
English school most of her life.'
His next attempt to phone
Tonbridge was cut short by Hazel who announced that a deputation of students
was waiting to see him.
'I can give them ten
minutes, but no more,' he said curtly. 'I'm lecturing at eleven.'
The students filed in. He
recognized Sam and the little frightened girl whose father made aspirins, and
the huge Welshman with cauliflower ears - all third years whom he didn't know
as well as he should have done because of his absence in India - but there were
other students not in his department at all. It was Sam, wrapped in his
muffler, who seemed to be their spokesman.
'We've come about Miss
Berger, sir. We don't think she should be sent away.' It cost him to speak as
he did, for Professor Somerville, hitherto, had been his god. 'We think it's
victimization.' And as the Professor continued to look at him stonily: 'We
think it's unfair in view of what the Jewish people - '
'Thank you; it is not
necessary to remind me of the fate of Jewish people.'
'No.' Sam swallowed. 'But
we can't see why she should go just because of a few technicalities.'
'Miss Berger is not being
victimized. She is being transferred.'
'Yes. But so are the Jews
and the gypsies and the Freemasons in Germany,' said Sam, scoring an unexpected
point. 'And the Socialists. They're being transferred to camps in the East.'
'And she doesn't want
to go,' said Pilly, stammering with nerves at addressing the man on whose
account she was being put through so much. 'She likes it here and she helps.
She can make you see things.'
'It's true, sir.' A tall,
fair man whom Quin did not recognize spoke from the back. 'I'm from the German
Department and… well, I don't mind telling you I got pretty discouraged
studying the language when all you hear is Hitler braying on the radio. But I
met her in the library and… well, if she can forget the Nazis…'
Quin was silent, his eyes
travelling over the deputation.
'You seem to have forgotten
one of Miss Berger's most fervent admirers,' he said. 'Why has nobody brought
the sheep?'
It was as he was returning
from lunch that Quin found a visitor in his room.
'You must forgive me for
troubling you,' said Professor Berger, rising from his chair.
'It's no trouble - it's a
pleasure to see you, sir.'
But Quin, as he shook
hands, was shocked by the change in him. Berger had been a tall, upright
figure, dignified in the manner of an Old Testament prophet. Now his face was
gaunt and lined and there was a great weariness in his voice.
'Is it all right to talk
German?'
'Of course.' Quin shut the
door, ushered him to a better chair.
'I have come about my
daughter. About Ruth. I understand there has been some trouble and I wondered
if there was anything I could do to put it right.'
Quin picked up a ruler and
began to turn it over and over in his hands.
'She will have told you
that I'm arranging to have her transferred to the University of Tonbridge, down
in Kent.'
'Ah. So that's it. I didn't
know. She only told me that she had to leave.'
'It's hardly a secret.
Everyone in the university here seems to make it their business.'
'Could I ask why she is
being sent away?'
The old man's voice was dry
and remote, but the distress behind the words was easy to hear and Quin,
accustomed to thinking of himself as Berger's underling, found himself
increasingly uncomfortable.
'I thought it was inadvisable
that I should teach someone whose family I knew so well. It would lay your
daughter open to charges that she was being favoured.'
The Professor smoothed his
black hat. 'Really? I have to say that if I had refused to teach the children
of men I knew well in Vienna, I would have had many empty seats at my
lectures.'
'Perhaps. But British
colleges are different. There is more gossip; they're smaller.'
'Professor Somerville,
please tell me the truth,' said Ber-ger, and it was not till he heard this man,
thirty years his senior, address him by his rank, that Quin realized how hurt
the old man was. 'Has Ruth done something wrong? Is she not equal to the
course? We tried to teach her well, but - ' 'No, absolutely not. Ruth is an
excellent student.' 'Is it her manner then? Do you find her too forward? Reared
among academics she perhaps appears lacking in respect?'
'Not at all. She has
already made more friends that one would have believed possible, both among the
students and the staff.'
'Then… can there have been…
some kind of scandal? She is pretty, I know, but I would swear that she - '
Quin leant across his desk
to speak with suitable emphasis. 'Please believe me, sir, when I tell you that
I am sending her away only because I think that the connection with your
family, the debt I owe you - '
'What debt?' the other man
interrupted sternly. 'The symposium in Vienna, your hospitality. And the
honorary degree.'
'Yes, the degree. We heard
from colleagues that you went to the ceremony, but not to the dinner.'
'That's correct. When I
heard that you were not there - ' began Quin, and broke off. 'I should have
thanked you for arranging it, but I went straight up to Bowmont.'
There was a pause. Then
Professor Berger, speaking slowly, looking at the ground, said: 'My wife
believes that it was you who helped Ruth in Vienna.'
Quin's silence lasted a
fraction too long. 'Oh really? Why does she believe that?'
'You may well ask,' said
the Professor, a trifle bitterly. 'Normal thought processes are entirely
foreign to Leonie's nature. As far as I can gather it is because you dived into
the Grundlsee to retrieve her sister-in-law's monograph on the Mi-Mi. Also
because you danced twice with her god-daughter, Franzi, at the University Ball.
Franzi had very bad acne and a squint and it was because you singled her out
and were kind to her that she agreed to have her eye operated on, and the acne
disappeared of itself, and now she is married and has two abominably behaved
children and has fortunately settled in New York.'
'I'm afraid I don't
entirely follow you,' said Quin apologetically.
'There were other reasons
with which I won't bore you. Apparently you threw your hat over a Herrenpilz
which Mishak was stalking, thereby preventing Frau Pollack from getting it. We
always regarded the mushrooms near the house as ours and… ' He shook his head.
'What a lost world that seems. But anyway, the gist of Leonie's argument is
that people don't change; if you were kind then you would be kind now. If you
found out that I was not at the university, you would look me up and find Ruth.
That is what my wife thinks, not what I think, and I don't want you to say
anything you would like to keep to yourself. But it is possible that if Leonie
is correct you might feel worried about having Ruth here. You might feel that
she would become too attached to you.'
'No, I don't feel that.'
'It would be natural,
however. She has a very warm heart and she was always talking about you after
you left us that summer. Not to mention the blue rabbit.' And as Quin frowned
in puzzlement: 'The one you shot for her in the Prater. She went to bed with it
for years and when its ear came off, we had to call in Dr Levy to perform
surgery.'
'I'd forgotten.'
'You were young; the world
was before you, it still is. Heaven forbid that you should cling to the past as
we do. But what I wanted to say was that you need have no fears on that score…
however fond Ruth is of you, however she might look up to you as…'
'An older man,' said Quin,
raising his eyebrows.
Berger shrugged. 'She is totally
committed to her young cousin, to Heini Radek. Everything she does in the end
is for him. So you see you would be quite safe. She will marry Radek and turn
his music for him and choose the camellias for his buttonhole. It has been like
that ever since he came to Vienna.'
'In that case does it
matter so much where she gets a degree? Or even whether?'
'Perhaps I attach too much
importance to learning: it is a characteristic of my race. Perhaps, too, I am
one of those fathers who thinks no one is good enough for his daughter. Heini
is a gifted boy, but I would have liked her to have a choice.' He changed tack.
'One thing is certain,. Ruth won't go to Tonbridge. She spent the morning at
the Employment Exchange and now she is writing letters of application and
trying not to cry.'
'I'm sure she'll see
reason.'
'Allow me to know my own
daughter,' said Berger with dignity. He unhooked his walking stick, ready to
leave. 'Well, you must do what you think right. I wouldn't have been pleased if
someone had told me how to run my department. I'm going to Manchester for a few
weeks and I'd hoped -'
'Ah yes!' Quin seized the
change of subject with alacrity. 'You'll enjoy the Institute. Feldberg's a
splendid fellow - but don't let that skinflint of an accountant do you out of
the proper fee. There's a perfectly adequate endowment for classification
work.'
'I was not aware that I had
mentioned my appointment at the Institute,' said Professor Berger, looking at
him sternly. 'Nor that I had been asked to classify the Howard Collection.'
Taken, so to speak, from
the rear while defending his flank, Quin shuffled some papers on his desk.
'Things get about,' he
murmured.
'So you arranged the job in
Manchester? You asked them to get in touch with me? I should have guessed
that.'
'Well, for heaven's sake,
you've done nothing to help yourself since you came. A man of your eminence
sitting in the public library next to a tramp! Why didn't you contact the
people you've helped in your time? I only mentioned your name - Feldberg didn't
even know you were in England!'
Berger had put on his hat,
taken up his walking stick. When he spoke again, he was smiling. 'It is
strange, I have so many degrees - so very many - and my wife failed even her
diploma in flower arranging because she always put too many flowers in the
vase, and yet you see she was right. People don't change.'
Only at the door did he
turn, his voice grave once more, his face showing its utter fatigue. 'Let the
child stay, Quin-ton,' he said, using the name he had used all those years ago.
'It's less than a year after all, and who knows what is in store for us.' And
very quietly: 'She will not trouble you.'
But in the end it was not
Berger's plea which secured a reprieve for Ruth, nor the intervention of the
students. It was not even the obvious pleasure which Lady Plackett had shown in
getting rid of a girl who did not fit into the general mould. It was a poster
by the newspaper kiosk Quin passed on the way home, announcing: HITLER IN
CZECHOSLOVAKIA. PICTURES.
The pictures, when Quin
bought the paper, showed the Führer grinning and garlanded with flowers, the
swastika banners hanging from the buildings as they had done in Vienna. Austria
in March, Czechoslovakia in October… could anyone believe it would stop there?
The average life of an
infantry officer in 1918 had been six weeks. In the navy he might expect to
last longer, but not much. When war came, as it surely must, would anyone mind
who was married to whom and for how long?
'O'Malley says he's got no
room,' was Quin's way of making his decision known to Dr Felton. 'Tell Miss
Berger she can stay.'
And Roger nodded, and
neither then nor later revealed what he had just read in the University
News: that O'Malley was in hospital with concussion after a car crash and
not in a position to say anything at all.
In the second week of
October, Leonie's prayers on behalf of the nursery school teacher were
answered. Miss Bates became engaged to be married - a triumph of camiknickers
over personality - and went home to Kettering to prepare her trousseau. Her
room on the ground floor back thus became vacant and Paul Ziller moved into it which
made everybody happy. Ziller no longer had to practise in the cloakroom of the
Day Centre but could stay at home; Leonie could get hold of his shirts to wash
whenever it suited her and Uncle Mishak had direct access to the garden.
Mishak had not found it
necessary to return the piece of land he had claimed at the time of the Munich
crisis. They had told him to Keep Calm and Dig and he continued to do so. Since
he couldn't afford to buy plants or fertilizer, his activities were limited,
but not as limited as one might expect. The old lady two doors down still owned
her house and, in exchange for help with the digging, she gave Mishak cuttings
and seeds from her herbaceous border. Nor were Mishak's rambles through
London's parks without reward, for he carried his Swiss army knife in his
pocket, and a number of brown paper bags. No more than Dr Elke's tapeworms
would have destroyed the host that nourished them would Mishak have caused harm
to the plants he encountered, but a little discreet pruning often brought him
back enriched by a cutting of philadelphus or a seedhead of clematis. And if
there was no money for fertilizer, there was a plentiful supply of compost at
Number 27 and the neighbouring houses, beginning with the remains of Fraulein
Lutzenholler's soups.
Hilda, meanwhile, had made
a breakthrough in the British Museum, braving the inner sanctum of the Keeper
of the
Anthropology Collection and
confronting him with her views on the Mi-Mi drinking cup.
'It is not from the Mi-Mi,'
said Hilda, peering earnestly through her spectacles, and gave chapter and
verse.
The Keeper had not agreed,
but he had not ejected her. That refugees were not allowed to work was a
misapprehension. No one minded them working, what they were not allowed to do
was get paid. Her credentials established, Hilda spent happy hours in
the dusty basement of the museum, sorting the artefacts sent back by travellers
in the previous century, for this woman who spelled death to the most hardened
floor polisher, could handle the clay figurines and ankle bracelets she
encountered in her profession with delicacy and skill.
A certain cautious hope
thus pervaded Number 27 during October, the more so as Ruth, now re-established
at college, was obviously loving her work. Even the gloomy Fraulein Lutzenholler
had a new occupation, for Professor Freud had at last left Vienna and been
installed in a house a few streets away. She did not expect to be noticed by
Freud, (who was, in any case, extremely old and ill) because she had spoken
well of Freud's great rival, Jung, at a meeting of the Psychoanalytical Society
in 1921, but she liked just to stand in front of his house and look,
as Cezanne had looked at Mont St Victoire.
With both Hilda and the
psychoanalyst out of the way, and her husband busy preparing for his assignment
in Manchester, Leonie could get through the housework unimpeded, but as the
weather grew colder, she suffered a domestic sorrow which, though it caused her
shame, she shared with MissViolet and Miss Maud.
'I live with mice,' she said,
her blue eyes clouding, for she felt the stigma keenly.
It was true. Mice, as the
autumn advanced, were coming indoors in droves. They lived vibrant lives behind
the skirting boards of Number 27, they squeaked in marital ecstasy behind the
wainscot. Leonie covered everything edible, she scrubbed, she stalked and
bashed with broomsticks, she bought poison out of her meagre allowance from the
refugee committee - and they thrived on it.
'What about traps?' said
Miss Maud. 'We could lend you some.'
But traps needed cheese,
and cheese was expensive. 'That landlord,' said Leonie, stirring her coffee, 'I
have said and said he must bring the rat-catching man, and he does nothing.'
Miss Maud then offered one
of her kittens, but Leonie, with great politeness, refused.
'To live with mice, to live
with cats — for me it is the same,' she said sadly.
Ruth too was troubled by
the mice. She did not think that they could chew through the biscuit tin with
the Princesses on the lid, but a great many documents of importance were
collecting under the floorboards as Mr Proudfoot laboured on her behalf and it
was disconcerting to feel that they provided a rallying point for nesting
rodents.
But life in the university
was totally absorbing. If there had been any anxiety about Heini's visa, she
could not have given herself to her studies as she did, but Heini wrote with
confidence: his father had now found exactly who to bribe and he expected to be
with her by the beginning of November. If Heini had any worries they were about
the piano, but here too all was going well. For Ruth still worked at the Willow
three evenings a week and the cafe was beginning to attract people from up the
hill. She would not have taken tips from the refugees even if they could have
afforded them, but from wealthy film producers or young men with Jaguars in
search of "atmosphere", she took anything she could get and the jam
jar was three-quarters full.
Ruth's response to news of
her reprieve had been to ask Quin if she could see him privately for half an hour.
There was, she said, something she particularly wanted to tell him.
In trying to think of a
place where they would meet no one of his acquaintance, Quin had hit on The Tea
Pavilion in Leicester Square which no one in his family would have dreamt of
frequenting, and was hardly a haunt of eminent palaeontologists. He had not,
however, expected to score such a hit with Ruth who looked with delight at the
Turkish Bath mosaics, the potted palms and black-skirted waitresses, obviously
convinced that she was at the nerve centre of British social life.
The meeting began badly
with what Quin regarded as an excessive outburst of gratitude. 'Ruth, will you
please stop thanking me. And I don't take sugar.'
'I know that,' said Ruth,
offended. 'I remember it from Vienna. Also that it is upper class to put the
tea in first and then the milk because Miss Kenmore told me that that is what
is done by the mother of the Queen. But to expect me not to thank you is
unintelligent when you have probably saved my life and found a job for my
father and now are letting me return to college.'
'Yes, well I hope you've
thought that through properly. I don't know if the courts interest themselves
in the details of how we spend our days but you know what Proudfoot said about
collusion. If Heini comes back and finds that there are unnecessary delays to
your marriage he won't be at all pleased. I think you should take that into
consideration.'
'Yes, I have. But I'm sure
it'll be all right and with Heini it's more to do with being together, I told
you. It would have happened before, but my father could never understand about
the glass of water theory. One couldn't even discuss it in his presence.'
'What on earth is the glass
of water theory?'
'Oh, you know, that love…
physical love… is like drinking a glass of water when you are thirsty; it's
nothing to make a fuss about.'
'I don't know if you could
discuss it in my presence either,' said Quin meditatively. 'It sounds like
arrant nonsense.'
'Do you think so?' Ruth
looked surprised. 'But anyway, I don't think that he will mind about being
married at once because of his career.'
'I wonder. It's my belief
that the international situation will concentrate his thoughts wonderfully.
I'll bet he'll want to claim you, and to do so legally, as soon as possible.
However, I've made my point; if you're sure you know what you're doing, I'll
say no more.'
The plate of cakes he had
ordered for Ruth now arrived and were greeted by her with rapture.
'English patisserie is so…
bright, isn't it?' she said, surveying the yellow rims of the jam tarts, the
brilliant reds and greens of their fillings. She passed the plate to Quin who
said he limited his consumption of bicarbonate of soda to medicinal purposes,
and passed it back. 'Actually,' she went on, 'I wanted to say something
important about the annulment. That's why I asked you to meet me. In case it
goes wrong. I'm sure it won't, but in case. You see, I've been talking to Mrs
Burtt who is very intelligent and used to work for a lot of people who got
divorced. Not annulled, but divorced. I didn't realize how different that was.'
'Who is Mrs Burtt?'
'She's the lady who washes
up in the Willow Tea Rooms where I…' She broke off, suspecting that Quin, like
her father, might make a fuss on hearing that she still had an evening job.
'It's a place where we all go to. Anyway, she told me exactly what you have to
do to get divorced.' 'Oh, she did?'
'Yes.' Ruth bit into her
jam tart. 'You go to a hotel somewhere on the South Coast. Brighton is best
because it has a pier and slot machines and you book into a hotel with a
special lady that you have hired. And then you and the lady sit up all night
playing cards.' She looked up, her face a little troubled. 'Mrs Burtt didn't
say what kind of card games -rummy, I expect, or perhaps vingt-et-un?
Because for bridge you need more people, don't you, and poker is probably not
suitable? And then when morning comes you get into bed with the lady and ring
for the chambermaid to bring you breakfast, and she comes and then she
remembers you and the detective who has followed you calls her to give evidence
and you get divorced.'
She sat back, extremely
pleased with herself. 'Mrs Burtt seems to be very well informed. And certainly
if necessary I shall - '
'Ah, but no! That
is what I wanted to say. You've been so incredibly good to me that I couldn't
let you do that because I don't think you would enjoy it, so I shall do it
instead! Only of course I won't hire a lady, I shall hire a gentleman
which I shall be able to do by then because I shall have paid for Heini's piano
and got a job. Except that I don't know any card games except happy families,
but I shall learn and - '
'Ruth, will you please stop
talking rubbish. As though I would involve you in any squalid nonsense like
that.'
'It isn't nonsense. It's
just as important for you to be free so that you can marry Verena Plackett.'
'I wouldn't marry Verena
Plackett if she was the last - ' began Quin, caught off his guard.
'Ah, but that is because
you think she is too tall, but she could wear low heels or go barefoot which is
healthy - and even if you don't marry her there are all the ladies who jump at
you from behind pyramids and the ones who leave scarves in your rooms - and I
want to help.’
'Well, you're not going to
help by getting mixed up in that sort of rubbish,' said Quin. 'Now tell me
about your parents - how are they getting on and how is life in Belsize Park?'
Though she was clearly
offended by Quin's rejection of her plan, Ruth accepted the change of subject,
nor did her hurt feelings prevent her from eating a second jam tart and a
chocolate eclair, and by the time they left the restaurant, she was able to
turn to Quin and make him a promise with her customary panache.
'I know you don't like to
be thanked, but for tea everybody gets thanked and I want to tell you
that from now on I will never again try to be alone with you, I will be
completely anonymous: I will,' said Ruth with fervour, 'be nonexistent.’
Quin stood looking down at
her, an odd expression on his face. Ruth's eyes glowed with the ardour of those
who swear mighty oaths, her tumbled hair glowed in the light of the
chandeliers. A young man, passing with a friend, had turned to stare at her and
bumped into the doorman.
'That would interest me,'
he said thoughtfully. 'Yes, your nonexistence would interest me very much.'
Ruth was as good as her
word. She sat at the back of the lecture theatre (though no longer in a
raincoat); she flattened herself against the wall when the Professor passed;
her voice was never heard in his seminars.
This did not mean that she
failed to ask questions. As Quin's lectures opened more and more doors in her
mind, she trained her friends to ask questions on her behalf, and to hear Pilly
stumbling through sentences which had Ruth's hallmark in every phrase, gave
Quin an exquisite pleasure.
Nevertheless, Nature had
not shaped Ruth for nonexist-ence, a point made by Sam and Janet who said they
thought she was overdoing it. 'Just because you knew him in Vienna, you don't
have to fall over backwards to keep out of his way,' said Sam. 'Anyway it's a
complete waste of time -one can see your hair halfway across the quad -I bet he
knows exactly where you are.'
This, unfortunately, was
true. Ruth leaning over the parapet to feed the ducks was not nonexistent, nor
encountered in the library behind a pile of books, a piece of grass between her
teeth. She was not nonexistent as she sat under the walnut tree coaching Pilly,
nor emerging, drunk with music, from rehearsals of the choir. In general, Quin,
without conceit, would have said he was a man with excellent nerves, but a week
of Ruth's anonymity was definitely taking its toll.
If Ruth was trying to keep
out of the Professor's way, Verena Plackett was not. She emerged each morning
from the Lodge, punctual as an alderman, bearing her crocodile skin briefcase
and carrying over her arm a spotless white lab coat, one of three, which her
mother's maids removed, laundered, starched and replaced each day. Verena
continued to thank the staff on her parents' behalf at the end of every
lecture; she accepted only the sycophantic Kenneth Easton as her partner in
practicals; the liver fluke, seeing her coming, flattened itself obediently
between glass slides. But it was in Professor Somerville's seminars that Verena
shone particularly. She sat in the chair next to the Professor's, her legs
neatly crossed at the ankle, and asked intelligent questions using completed
sentences and making it clear that she had read not only the books he had
recommended, but a great many others.
'I wonder what you think
about Ashley-Cunningham's views on bone atrophy as expressed in chapter five of
his Palaeohistology? was the kind of thing the other students had to
endure from Verena. 'It wasn't on our reading list, I know, but I happened to
find it in the London Library.'
That Ruth might be a
serious rival academically had not, at the beginning, occurred to Verena. A fey
girl who conversed with sheep was hardly to be taken seriously. It was
something of a shock, therefore, when the first essays were returned and she
found that Ruth, like herself, was getting alphas and spoken of as someone
likely to get a First. Verena set her jaw and decided to work even harder — and
so did Ruth. Ruth, however, blamed herself, she felt besmirched, and
at night when Hilda slept, she sat up in bed and spoke seriously to God.
'Please, God,' Ruth would
pray, 'don't let me be competitive. Let me realize what a privilege it is to
study. Let me remember that knowledge must be pursued for its own sake and
please, please stop me wanting to beat Verena Plackett in the exams.'
She prayed hard and she
meant what she said. But God was busy that autumn as the International Brigade
came back, defeated, from Spain, Hitler's bestialities increased, and sparrows
everywhere continued to fall. And Ruth, her prayers completed, would spoil
everything and get out of bed and take her lecture notes to the bathroom, the
only place at Number 27 where, late at night, one could study undisturbed.
As term advanced, the talk
turned increasingly to the field course to be held at the end of the month. Of
this break in the routine of lectures, the research students who had been to
Bowmont spoke with extreme enthusiasm.
'You go out in boats and
there are bonfires and cook-ups and on Sunday you go up to the Professor's
house for a whopping lunch.'
Ruth was prepared to
believe all this, but she was adamant about not going.
'I can't possibly afford
the fare, let alone all those Wellington boots and oilskins,' she said. 'And
anyway, I have to prepare for Heini. I don't mind, honestly.'
Pilly, however, did mind
and said so at length, arid so did Ruth's other friends.
And Dr Felton minded. He
did more than mind: He was absolutely determined to get Ruth to Bowmont.
For there was a
Hardship Fund. It existed to help students in difficulties and it was under the
management of the Finance Committee on which Roger sat, as he sat on most of
the committees that came the department's way since Quin had made it clear from
the start that he was not prepared to waste his time in overheated rooms and
repetitive babble.
The committee was due to
meet on a Saturday morning just two weeks before the beginning of the course.
Felton had already canvassed members from other departments and found only
goodwill. The fund was healthily in credit, and everyone who knew Ruth Berger
(and a surprising number of people did) thought it an excellent idea that it
should be used to send her to Northumberland. It was thus with confidence and
hope that Roger walked into the meeting.
He had reckoned without the
new Vice Chancellor. Lord Charlefont had steered committees along at a spanking
pace. Sir Desmond, whose degree was in Economics, thrived on detail: every test
tube to be purchased, every box of chalk came under his scrutiny and at one
o'clock, before the question of the Hardship Fund could be fully discussed, the
committee was adjourned for lunch.
'Do you really have to go
back?' asked Lady Plackett, who had hoped to persuade her husband to attend a
private view.
'Yes, I do. Felton from the
Zoology Department is trying to get one of the students on to Somerville's
field course. He wants to use the Hardship Fund for that. It's a very moot
point, it seems to me - there's a precedent involved; To what extent can not
going on a field trip be classed as hardship? We shall have to debate this very
carefully.'
'It's not the Austrian girl
he wants the money for? Miss Berger?'
Sir Desmond reached for the
agenda. 'It doesn't say so, but it seems possible. Why?'
'If so, I would regard it
as most inadvisable. As you know, Professor Somerville wanted to send her away
- there was some connection with her family in Vienna. He was obviously aware
of the danger of favouritism. And Dr Felton has been paying her special
attention ever since, so Verena tells me.'
'You mean - ' Sir Desmond
looked up sharply.
'No, no; nothing like that.
Just bending the regulations to accommodate her. But if it got about that a
fund intended strictly for cases of hardship was being used to give an
unnecessary jaunt to a girl who is already here on sufferance, I think it could
lead to all sorts of gossip and speculation.
Better, surely, to keep the
money for British students who are genuinely needy?'
'Well, it's a point,' said
Sir Desmond. 'Certainly any kind of irregularity would be most unfortunate. She
is a girl who has already attracted rather a lot of attention.'
'And not of a favourable
kind,' said Lady Plackett.
'What is it?' asked Quin.
He had just returned from the museum and was preparing to work late on an
article for Nature.
'That creep, Plackett.'
Roger's spectacle frames looked as though they had been dipped in pitch. 'He's
blocked the Hardship Fund - we can't use it to get Ruth to Bowmont. It would
set an unfortunate precedent if any student felt they could travel at the
college's expense!'
'Ah. That's probably Lady
Plackett's doing. She doesn't care for Ruth.' Quin, to his own surprise, found
that he was very angry. He would have said that he did not want Ruth at
Bowmont. Ruth being 'invisible' was bad enough here at Thameside - at Bowmont
it would be more than he could stand, but the pettiness of the new regime was
hard to accept.
'Does Ruth want to go?' he
asked. 'Isn't the famous Heini due any day?'
'Not till the beginning of
November; we'll be back by then,' said Roger. He stared gloomily into the tank
of slugs. 'She wants to go right enough, whatever she says.'
'You're very keen to have
her, you and Elke? Because she will benefit?'
'Yes… well, damn it, you
run the course, you know it's the best in the country. But I wanted her to see
the coast. I owe her…'
'You what?'
Roger shrugged. 'I know you
think we make a pet of her -Elke and Humphrey and I… but she gives it all back
and - '
'Gives what back?'
Roger shook his head. 'It's
difficult to explain. You prepare a practical… good heavens, you know what it's
like. You're here half the night trying to find decent specimens and then the
technician's got flu and there aren't enough Petri dishes… And then she comes
and stares down the microscope as though this is the first ever water flea, and
suddenly you remember what it was all about - why you started in this game in
the beginning. If her work was sloppy it would be different, but it isn't. She
deserved more than you gave her for that last test.'
'I gave her eighty-two.'
'Yes. And Verena Plackett
eighty-four. Not that it's my business. Well, I reckon nothing can be done, not
with you falling over backwards not to favour her because she sat on your knee
in nappies.' i
'I do nothing of the sort,
but you must see that I can't interfere - it would only do Ruth harm.' And as
his deputy still stood there, looking disconsolate: 'How are things at home?
How is Lillian?'
Roger sighed. 'No baby yet.
And she won't adopt. If only I hadn't asked Humphrey to supper!' Dr Fitzsimmons
had meant well when he had told Roger's wife about the drop in temperature a
woman could expect before her fertile period, but he didn't have to watch
Lillian come out of the bathroom bristling with thermometers and refusing him
his marital rights until the crucial time. 'I shall be glad to go north for a
while, I can tell you.'
'I shall be glad to have
you there.'
Ruth was not disappointed
in the findings of the Finance Committee because she did not know of Dr
Felton's efforts on her behalf. But if she held firm over her decision to stay
behind, she was perfectly ready to join in the speculations about Verena
Plackett's pyjamas.
For Verena, of course, was
going to Northumberland, and what she would wear in bed in the dormitory above
the boathouse occupied much of her fellow students' thoughts. Janet thought she
would turn into her wooden bunk in see-through black lace.
'In case the Professor
comes up the ladder at midnight with a cranial cast.'
Pilly thought a pair of
striped pyjamas was more likely, with a long cord which she would instruct
Kenneth Easton to tie into a double knot before retiring. Ruth, on the other
hand, slightly obsessed by Verena's pristine lab coat which she deeply envied,
suggested gathered calico, heavily starched.
'So you will hear her
crackle in the night,' she said.
But in fact none of them
were destined to see Verena's pyjamas, for the Vice Chancellor's daughter had
other plans.
If Leonie each night looked
eagerly to Ruth for her account of the day, and Mrs Weiss' dreaded 'Veil?'
began her interrogation in the Willow Tea Rooms, Lady Plackett waited with more
self-control, but no less avidity, for Verena's news.
Verena reported with
restraint about the staff, but where the students were concerned, she permitted
herself to speak freely. Thus Lady Plackett learnt about the unsuitable - not
to say lewd - behaviour of Janet Carter in the back of motor cars, the
dangerously radical views of Sam Marsh, and the ludicrous gaffes made by
Priscilla Yarrowby who had confused the jaw bone of a mammoth with that of a mastodon.
'And Ruth Berger persists
in helping her, of which one cannot approve,' said Verena. 'It is no
kindness to inadequate students to push them on. They should be weeded out for
their own sake and find their proper level.'
Lady Plackett agreed with
this, as all thinking people must. 'She seems to be a very disruptive
influence, the foreign girl,' she said.
She had not been pleased
when Professor Somerville had reinstated Ruth. There was something… excessive…
about
Ruth Berger. Even the way
she smelled the roses in the quadrangle was… unnecessary, thought Lady
Plackett, who had watched her out of the window. But on one point Verena was
able to set her mother's mind at rest. Ruth was not liked by the Professor; he
seemed to avoid her; she never spoke in seminars.
'And she is definitely not
coming to Bowmont,' said Verena, who was unaware of her mother's interference
in the matter of the Hardship Fund.
'Ah, yes, Bowmont,' said
Lady Plackett thoughtfully. 'You know, Verena, I find that I cannot be happy
about you cohabiting in a dormitory with girls who do… things… in the backs of
motor cars.'
'I confess I have been
worrying about that,' said Verena. 'Of course, one wants to be democratic'
'One does,' agreed Lady
Plackett. 'But there are limits.' She paused, then laid a soothing hand on her
daughter's arm. 'Actually,' she said, 'I have had an idea.'
Verena lifted her head. 'I
wonder,' she said, 'if it is the same as mine.'
'Look at him,' said Frances
Somerville bitterly, handing her binoculars to her maid. 'Gloating. Rubbing his
hands.'
Martha took the glasses and
trained them on to the middle-aged gentleman with the intellectual forehead,
making his way along the cliff path towards the headland.
'He's writing in his book,'
she said, as though the taking of notes was further proof of Mr Ferguson's
iniquity.
'Well he needn't expect me
to give him lunch,' said Miss Somerville. 'He can go to The Black Bull for
that.'
Mr Ferguson had arrived
soon after breakfast, sent by the National Trust at Quin's request to see if
the Trust might interest itself in Bowmont. A man of impeccable tact, scholarly
and mild-mannered, he had been received by Miss Somerville as though he had
just crawled out of some particularly repellent sewer.
'Maybe it won't come to
anything,' said Martha, handing back the glasses. After forty years in Miss
Somerville's service, she was allowed to speak to her as a friend. 'Maybe he
won't fancy the place.'
'Ha!' said Miss Somerville.
Her scepticism was
justified. Though Mr Ferguson would report officially to Quin in London, he had
already indicated that three miles of superb coastline, not to mention the
famous walled garden, would probably interest the Trust very much indeed.
So there it was, thought
Frances wretchedly, there the men in peaked caps, the lavatory huts, the
screeching trippers. Quin had made it clear that even if negotiations went forward,
he would insist on a flat in the house set aside for her use, but if he thought
she would cower there and watch over the defilement of the place she had
guarded for twenty years, he was mistaken. The day the Trust moved in, she
would move out.
Perhaps if the letter from
Lady Plackett hadn't arrived just after Mr Ferguson took his leave, Miss
Somerville would have reacted to it differently. But it came when she felt as
old and discouraged as she had ever felt in her life and ready to clutch at any
straw.
The Vice Chancellor's wife
began by reminding Miss Somerville of their brief acquaintance in the finishing
school in Paris.
You may find it difficult
to remember the little shy girl so much your junior, wrote Lady
Plackett, who was not famous for her tact, but I shall
always recall your kindness to me when I was homesick and perplexed.
Miss Somerville did not
remember either the homesick junior or her own kindness, but when Lady Plackett
went on to remind her that she had been Daphne Croft-Ellis and that she had
been presented in the same year as Miss Somerville's second cousin, Lydia
Barchester, the heel of whose shoe had come off as she left Their Majesties
walking backwards, she read on with the attention one affords letters from
those in one's own world.
I was so excited to find
that your dear nephew was on our staff and he may perhaps have mentioned that
Verena, our only daughter, is taking his course. She is quite enchanted with
his scholarship and expertise and at dinner recently they had a most engrossing
conversation which was, I fear, quite above my head. You will, however, be
wondering what emboldens me to write to you after so many years away in India
and I will be entirely frank. As you know, dear Quinton runs a field course for
our students at Bowmont. To this course Verena, as one of his Honours students,
will, of course, be required to go and indeed she is looking forward to it
greatly. However her position here at Thameside is delicate, as I know you will
understand. She herself insists on being treated like all the other students as
regards examinations and academic standards and there is certainly no
difficulty there, for she is very clever.
But socially, of course,
she leads a different life, and we are careful not to encourage her classmates
to take her presence at university functions for granted. Without some sense in
which the Vice Chancellor and his family are different from ordinary academics,
both staff and students, there could be no authority and no stability. This is
something I need not explain to you.
So I am understandably
anxious at the idea that Ver-ena should share a dormitory with the other
pupils. I gather that everyone 'mucks in' and sleeps in bunk beds and that
there is no attempt to enforce any kind of discipline and though the students
are, of course, the salt of the earth, some of them come from backgrounds which
would, I think, make them uncomfortable if Verena was among them. Would it
therefore be very impertinent of me to ask if my daughter could stay with you
for the duration of the course? I understand that your nephew has his own rooms
in the tower and that you are responsible for the domestic arrangements so that
he would not need to concern himself with Verena unless he wished to do so. I
myself shall be visiting the north at this time, and as Verena's twenty-fourth
birthday happens to fall on the last Friday of the course, I might perhaps
invite myself just for that day before going on to make contact with dear Lord
Hartington and the many other friends and connections of my own family which,
after our long absence in India, I long to see again.
Do forgive me for being so
blunt, but Verena is, understandably, so very dear to me and I cannot help
wanting the best for her. And what could be better than to meet again the
friend of my childhood, and protector? With all good wishes, Daphne Plackett
Miss Somerville read the
letter through twice and sat for a while, pondering. Then she rang for Turton.
'Tell Harris I shall want
the motor,' she said. 'I'm going to go over to Rothley.'
She was about to step into
the old Buick, which she resolutely refused to let Quin replace, when a series
of high-pitched yelps made her turn round and a shoe-sized puppy hurled itself
at her legs, gathered itself up to leap onto the running board, missed, rolled
over on to its back… and all the while its rat-like tail rotated in a frenzy
and its unequal eyes gleamed with life affirmation and the prospect of
togetherness.
'Take it away,' said Miss
Somerville grimly. 'And tell whoever let it out that if they don't keep the
door shut, I'll have it drowned.'
The chauffeur repressed a
grin, for the passion of the mongrel puppy for Bowmont's mistress was a
standing joke among the servants, but Miss Somerville, sitting stiffly in the
back of the motor, could find no amusement in what had happened to her prize
labrador. The last of Comely's thoroughbred puppies had been weaned and sold to
excellent homes when, sooner than expected, she had come on heat again and
spent a night away. The result of this escapade was a litter the like of which
Miss Somerville, in thirty years of breeding dogs, could not have imagined in
her most fevered dreams. By bullying various underlings on the estate, she had
managed to find homes for the older puppies - but to get anyone to take the
runt of the litter, with its arbitrary collection of whiskers, piebald stomach
and vestigial legs, she would have had to put the villagers into stocks. And
somehow this canine disaster seemed to go with all the other threats to her
ordered world: with cowmen who sang opera and strangers with notebooks tramping
over Somerville land.
The road to Rothley led
past Bamburgh, once Bowmont's rival to the north, and the causeway to Holy
Island, before turning inland towards the Hall - a long, red sandstone building
apparently kept aloft by fierce strands of ivy. The yapping of half a dozen
Jack Russell terriers greeted her and presently she was in Lady Rothley's small
drawing room while her friend perused the letter.
'One cannot really like the
tone,' she said presently, 'but quite honestly, Frances, I do not see what you
have to lose. At worst, Verena is a tiresome girl and you have her for a
fortnight and at best…'
;
'Yes, that's what I
thought. And she really does seem to be clever. She might interest him where
sillier girls have failed.'
'I'll tell you one thing,'
said Lady Rothley. 'If she's got Croft-Ellis blood in her, she'll soon scotch
any nonsense about giving Bowmont to the National Trust! If Quin marries Verena
Plackett, they won't get their hands on a square inch of midden. It's not for
nothing that their motto is What I have let no man covet! If there's a
meaner family in England, I've yet to hear of it.' And seeing her friend's
face. 'No, I'm joking, it's not as bad as that - they're good landlords and go
back to the Conqueror. If the girl manages to get Quin, she'll know
how to behave.'
'You think I should invite
her then?'
'Yes, I do. And more than
that. I think we should put our shoulders to the wheel. I think we should rally
round and really welcome the girl. If it's her birthday during the time she's
here why don't you give a party for her, or a small dance? I know you don't
care for all that, but we'll help you. Rollo's coming up next week with a
friend from Sandhurst and Helen's girls are home. Nothing formal, of course,
but it's years since Quin's seen his home en fete - and with the
students here he can't run away like he sometimes does!'
Frances, quailing at the
thought of so much sociability, now had another unpleasant thought. 'You don't
think he'll expect the students to come? The ones down at the boat-house, I
mean?'
'I shouldn't think so. Quin
may be democratic, but he knows how things are done.' And coming over to lay
her arm round Miss Somerville's shoulder in a rare gesture of affection: 'This
may be what we've been waiting for, Frances. Let's give the girl a chance.'
Miss Somerville returned to
Bowmont as a woman with a mission. The letter she wrote to Lady Plackett was
cordial in the extreme, and the instructions she gave to Turton were explicit.
'We're having house guests
next week - a Miss Plackett, one of the Professor's students. I want the
Tapestry Room prepared for her, and the Blue Room for her mother. And there'll
be a small party on the 28th which is Miss Plackett's birthday.'
Turton might be discreet,
but the girls who prepared the Tapestry Room for Verena were not and nor was
the cook, told to expect twenty or so young people for supper and dancing. And
soon it had spread to all the servants' halls in North Northumberland that
Quinton Somerville was expecting a very special young lady and that wedding
bells were in the air at last.
And as below stairs, so
above. Ann Rothley was as good as her word. She telephoned Helen Stanton-Derby,
still suffering from the violin-playing chauffeur that Quin had wished on her,
and Christine Packham over in Hexham and Bobo Bainbridge down in Newcastle -
and all of them, even those with marriageable daughters who would have done
very well as mistress of Bowmont, promised to welcome Verena Plackett whose
mother was a Croft-Ellis and who would, if she married dear Quin, scotch once
and for all this nonsense about giving his home away. Not only that, but they
unhesitatingly offered their offspring for Verena's party, for the knowledge that
Quin had seen his duty at last made everyone extremely happy.
As for Lady Plackett,
receiving a reply of such unexpected cordiality, she decided to accompany
Verena herself and stay for a few days at Bowmont, returning for Verena's
actual party.
'But I think, dear,' she
said to her gratified daughter, 'that it might be best say nothing about the
invitation till just before we go. There could be jealousy and ill-feeling
among the students - and you know how concerned dear Quinton is about any
apparent favouritism.'
Verena thought this was
sensible. 'We will leave Miss Somerville to acquaint him,' she said, and
returned to her books.
And Frances did, of course,
write to Quin and tell him what she had done, but the week before the students
were due to leave, a Yorkshire quarryman turned up a leg bone whose size and
weight caused pandemonium in the local
Department of Antiquities.
Answering a plea to authenticate the find and halt work in the gravel pit, Quin
rearranged his lectures and drove north. Delayed by the importance of the
discovery - for the bone turned out to be the femur of an unusually complete
mammoth skeleton - and involved in a bloodthirsty battle with a rapacious
contractor, Quin decided not to return to town, but make his way straight to
Bowmont.
His aunt's letter thus
remained unopened in his Chelsea flat.
It was the day after Quin
left for Yorkshire that Ruth received the confirmation she had been longing
for. Heini had booked his ticket, he was coming on 2 November and in an
aeroplane!
'So no one will be able to
take him off!' said Ruth with shining eyes.
'I can't believe I'm really
going to see him,' said Pilly.
'Well you are - and you're
going to hear him too!'
For now, of course, what
mattered more than anything was to secure the piano. Ruth was only five
shillings short of the sum she needed, and as though the gods knew there was no
more time to waste, they sent, that very night, a young man named Martin Hoyle
in to the Willow Tea Rooms.
Hoyle lived in a villa on
Hampstead Hill with his mother and had independent means, but it was his
ambition to be a journalist and he had already submitted a number of articles
to newspapers and magazines, not all of which had been refused. Now he had had
an idea which he was sure would further his career. He would extract from the
refugees who had colonized the Willow, their recollections of Vienna; poignant
anecdotes of the pomp and splendour of the Imperial City, or more recent ones
of the Vienna of Wittgenstein and Freud. Not only that, but Mr Hoyle had an angle.
He was going to contrast the rich stock of memories which they carried in their
heads with the meagre contents of the actual luggage they had been allowed to
bring. "Suitcases of the Mind" was to be the title of the piece which
he was sure he could sell to the News Chronicle or even to The
Times,
He had come early. Though
Ziller, Dr Levy and von Hofmann - all Viennese born and bred - were talking
together by the window, it was Mrs Weiss, sitting alone by the hat stand, who
accosted him.
'I buy you a cake?' she
suggested. To her surprise, the young man nodded. 'Thank you,' he said, 'but
let me buy you one.' Mrs Weiss did not object to this so long as he sat down
and let her talk to him. Two slices of guggle were brought, and Mr Hoyle
introduced himself.
'I was wondering if you
would mind if we talked a little about your past? Your memories?' said Mr
Hoyle. 'You see, I was once in Vienna; it was a city I loved so much.'
Mrs Weiss' eyes flickered.
She had never actually been in Vienna, which was a long way from East Prussia
and her native city of Prez, but if she admitted this, Mr Hoyle would go away
and talk to the men by the window, whereas if she played her cards right, she
could keep him at her table and when her daughter-in-law came to fetch her, she
would see her in conversation with a good-looking young man. 'Vat is it you
vant me to remember?' she enquired. 'Well, for example, did you ever see the
Kaiser? Driving out of the gates of the Hofburg, perhaps?'
A somewhat frustrating
quarter of an hour followed. In lieu of the Kaiser, Mr Hoyle received the old
lady's low opinion of mutton chop whiskers; instead of famous premieres at the
opera, he learnt of the laryngeal problems which had prevented her nephew,
Zolly Federmann, from taking to the stage.
'But the Prater?' asked Mr
Hoyle, growing a little" desperate. 'Surely you must have bowled your hoop
along the famous chestnut alley?'
Mrs Weiss had not, but
described a rubber crocodile on a string, of which she had been very fond till
some rough boys from an orphanage had punctured it.
'Well, what about the Giant
Wheel, then?' Mr Hoyle wiped his brow. 'Surely you remember riding on that? Or
the paddle boats on the Danube?'
It was at this point that
Ruth entered, ready to begin the evening's work, and smiled at the old lady. To
the men, Mrs Weiss would not have ceded the young journalist, but Ruth was
different. Ruth was her friend. She became suddenly exasperated.
'I haf not been on the
wheel in the Prater. I haf not been on the Danube in the paddling boat. I haf
not seen Franz Joseph coming from gates, and I do not remember Vienna because I
haf never been in Vienna. I have been only in Prez and once to the fur
sales in Berlin, but was cheated. So now please go away for I am only a poor
old woman and my daughter-in-law makes me sleep in wet air and it should be
better for everybody that I am dead.'
Needless to say, this
outburst, clearly audible throughout the cafe, brought help from all sides.
While Ziller and Dr Levy consoled the shaken Mr Hoyle, Ruth comforted the old
lady - and Miss Maud and Miss Violet agreed that under the circumstances (and
because Mr Hoyle's article, if published, might be good for trade) two tables
could be pushed together.
And soon Mr Hoyle's
notebook began to fill up with useful anecdotes. Dr Levy told how he had
assisted with the removal of an anchovy from the back of the Archduke Otto's
throat; Paul Ziller described being hit by a tomato during the premiere of
Schonberg's Verkldrte Nacht and von Hofmann recounted the classic
story of Tosca bouncing back from a too tightly stretched trampoline after her
suicidal leap from the ramparts.
But it was at the Willow's
waitress, as she too shared her memories, that Mr Hoyle looked most eagerly,
for he knew now what was missing from his story. Love was what was missing.
Love and youth and a central theme. A young girl waiting for her man, working
for him. Who wanted suitcases when all was said and done? Love was what they
wanted. Love in the Willow Tea Rooms… Love in Vienna and Belsize Park. If only
she would talk to him, he would sell his story, he was sure of that.
And Ruth did talk to him;
talking about Heini was her pleasure and delight. As she whisked between the
tables with her tray, she told him of Heini's triumphs at the Conservatoire and
how he had been inspired, in the meadow above the
Grundlsee, to write an
Alpine etude. He learnt of Heini's passion for Maroni, the sweet
chestnuts roasted everywhere on street corners in the Inner City - and that at
the age of twelve he had played a Mozart concerto based on the song of a
starling which surprised Mr Hoyle who had thought of starlings as raucous
despoilers on the roofs of railway stations.
'But you'll see, he'll play
it here,' said Ruth, 'and you must absolutely promise to come!'
An hour later, Mr Hoyle
closed his notebook and took his leave. Nor was he slow to show his gratitude.
Coming to clear the tables at closing time, Ruth found, under his plate, a
crisply folded note which she carried joyfully into the kitchen.
'Look!' she said. 'Just
look! Can you believe it? A whole ten-shilling note!'
'You've got enough, then?'
asked Mrs Burtt.
'I've got enough!'
The piano was expected in
the middle of the morning, but Leonie had been up since six o'clock, cleaning
the rooms, reblocking the mouseholes, polishing and dusting. By seven o'clock,
she had begun to bake and here she was destined to run into trouble.
Leonie was relatively
indifferent to the arrival of Heini's piano, but Ruth was bringing her friends
to celebrate and that was important. Not Verena Plackett, who did not figure
large in Ruth's accounts of her days, but Priscilla Yarrowby and Sam and Janet,
and the Welshman who had discovered the piano in an obscure shop on the way
back from the rugby field.
If her husband had been
with her, Leonie would have found it difficult to provide suitable refreshment,
for the food budget was desperately tight, but the absence of the professor -
much as she missed him - meant they had been able to eat potatoes and apple
puree made from the windfalls Mishak collected on his rambles and save.
Leonie accordingly had
saved, and bought two kilos of fine flour… had bought freshly ground almonds
and icing sugar and unsalted butter and the very finest vanilla pods -
and by nine o'clock was
removing from the oven batch after batch of perfectly baked vanilla Kipferl.
At which point her plans
for the morning began to go wrong. Leonie wanted Mishak to stay and meet Ruth's
friends - she always wanted Mishak - but what she wanted Hilda to do was go to
the British Museum and what she wanted Fraulein Lutzenholler to do was go up
the hill and look at Freud.
She had reckoned without
the power of the human nose to unlock emotion and recall the past. Hilda came
first, stumbling out of the bedroom in her dressing-gown.
'It is true, then,' she
said. 'I smelled them, but I thought it was a dream.' And she decided that as
it was a Saturday, she would not go to the museum, but work at home.
Fraulein Lutzenholler, her
fierce face tilted in disbelief, came next, carrying her sponge bag. 'Ah, yes:
the piano,' she said and added the dreaded words, 'I will stay here and help?
By the time the scent of
freshly ground coffee came to blend with the warm, familiar scent of the
thumb-sized crescents, it was clear that not only would no one voluntarily
leave Number 27 that morning, but a great many others would come. Ziller, of
course, had been invited, but presently Mrs Weiss arrived in a taxi and Mrs
Burtt, whose day off it was, and then a lady from next door murmuring something
ecstatic in Polish.
Thus Ruth, arriving with
her friends, came to a house redolent of all the well-remembered smells and the
sound of eager voices, and stopped for a moment, caught by the past, before she
ran upstairs and threw her arms round Leonie.
'Oh, you shouldn't have
baked, but how marvellous,' she said and rubbed her cheek against her
mother's.
Anyone Ruth was fond of
would have been welcomed with warmth by Leonie, but in Pilly she detected,
beneath the expensive clothes and Harrods handbag, just the kind of poor little
scrap she had protected in Vienna. As for Sam, he was so overawed at being in
the same room as Paul Ziller, all of whose records he had collected, that he
could hardly speak. Even without the arrival of the piano, the gathering had
all the makings of a splendid party.
But punctually at 11.30,
the piano did arrive.
'Easy does it,' said the
removal man, as removal men have said throughout the ages, trundling the
upright down the ramp and into the house - and 'steady there', as they fastened
ropes and pulleys to raise it to the top floor.
Steadiness was difficult.
Fraulein Lutzenholler had escaped from the sitting room and was giving advice;
Hilda hovered… But at last the job was done and the keys handed, with a courtly
bow, to Ruth.
'No, you unlock it, Huw,'
she said - and everyone felt the Tightness of the gesture, for it was the huge,
monosyllabic Welshman, doggedly searching the music shops of London, who had
found, in a distant suburb near the college rugby field, exactly the piano
Heini wanted: A Bosendorfer, one of the last to come out of the old workshops
and famous for its sweetness of tone.
'It makes it real now,'
Ruth said softly, touching the keys. 'I can believe now that Heini is coming.'
'Come on, try it,' said
Leonie, filling plates for the removal men, who thought they could leave now
but found themselves mistaken.
Though one of the world's
best violinists was in the room, Ruth sat down without embarrassment and played
a Schubert waltz - and Ziller smiled for it always touched him, this passion
for music which had been hers since infancy and transcended all limitations of
technique.
'I suppose you wouldn't,
sir… I mean… you wouldn't play?' Sam, nervous but entreating, had come to stand
beside him.
'Of course.'
Ziller went to fetch his
violin and played a Kreisler piece and a Beethoven bagatelle - and then he and
Ruth began fooling about, giving imitations of the customers in the Hungarian
restaurant trying not to tip the gypsies who came to their table - and
presently a quite extraordinary sound was heard: a rusty, wheezing noise which
no one had heard before: Fraulein Lutzenholler's laughter.
It was Pilly who spoiled it
all, poor Pilly who always got everything wrong.
'Oh, Mrs Berger,' she said
impetuously, 'please, please
won't you persuade Ruth to
come on the field course with us? We want her to come so much!'
Leonie put down her coffee
cup. 'What course is this?' Silence fell as Ruth looked with deep reproach at
her friend and Pilly blushed scarlet.
'It's at Professor
Somerville's place,' she stammered. 'We're all going. In three days' time.'
'I have heard nothing about
this,' said Leonie sternly. 'It doesn't matter, Mama,' said Ruth quickly. 'It's
just some practical work that happens in the autumn term, but I don't need it.'
Leonie ignored her.
'Everyone is going except Ruth?'
Pilly nodded. Desolate at
having upset her friend she moved towards Uncle Mishak, as those in trouble go
to lean against the trunks of trees and her eyes filled with tears.
Sam now entered the lists.
'If Ruth hasn't mentioned it, it's because of the money. It costs quite a bit
to go, but Pilly's father has offered to pay for Ruth - he's got more money
than he knows what to do with and everyone knows how Ruth helps Pilly, but Ruth
won't hear of it. She's as obstinate as a mule.'
'It is Professor Somerville
who is giving this course?' Leonie asked.
'Yes. And it's the best in
the country. We go to Bowmont and-'
Ruth now interrupted.
'Mama, I don't want to talk about it any more. I'm not taking money from Pilly
and I'm not going and that's the end of it.'
Leonie nodded. 'You are
quite right,' she said. 'To take money from friends is not good.' She smiled
warmly at Pilly. 'Come, you will help me to make more coffee.'
Only when the students were
leaving, did she take Sam aside.
'It is Dr Felton who makes
the arrangements for this course?'
'That's right. He's a
really nice man and he's very keen for Ruth to go.'
'And Professor Somerville?
Is he also keen that she goes?'
Sam frowned. 'He must be,
she's one of his best students.
But he's odd - they both
are. I've hardly heard him and Ruth exchange a word since she came.'
Leonie now had the
information she wanted. On a practical level, her course was clear - but how to
deal with her obstinate daughter?
'Mishak, you must help me,'
she said that evening, as the two of them sat alone in the sitting room which
was in no way improved by the presence of the piano.
Mishak removed his
long-stemmed pipe and examined the bowl to see if a few shreds of tobacco still
adhered to it, but they did not.
'You are going to sell your
brooch,' he stated.
'Yes. Only how to make her
go?'
'Leave it to me,' said
Mishak. And Leonie, who had intended to do just that, hugged him and went to
bed.
Quin had never had any
fault to find with the behaviour of the people who worked at Bowmont, but as he
drove through the village and up the hill, it seemed to him that everyone was
in an unusually genial and benevolent mood. In spite of the rain driving in
from the sea, Mrs Carter who kept the post office, the blacksmith at the forge
and old Sutherland at the lodge, came out to smile and wave and several times as
he stopped, his hand was shaken with a cordiality which seemed to hint at some
particular pleasure lying in store for him in which they shared.
'But you'll be wanting to
get along today,' said Mrs Ridley at the farm when they had exchanged a few
friendly words. 'You'll not be wanting to waste any more time, not today.'
Arriving at the house, he
found Turton in a similar mood. The butler called him Master Quinton, a
throwback to some twenty years ago and told him, beaming with good will, that
drinks would be served in the drawing room in half an hour, giving him plenty
of time to change.
This alone indicated more
formality than Quin usually permitted, for he made it clear that when he came
for the field course, he was here to work, but as he went inside he found
further signs that all was not as usual. The hall at Bowmont, with its
arbitrary collection of broadswords, incomprehensible tapestries and a weasel
which the Basher had stuffed, but without success, was not a place in which
anybody lingered. Today, though, in spite of his aunt's conviction that warmth
inside the house spelled softness and decay, the ancient deposit of pine cones
in the grate had been replaced by a fire of brightly burning logs, and though
flowers were seldom cut and brought indoors, Frances preferring to let her
plants grow unmolested, the Chinese vase on the oak chest was filled with
dahlias and chrysanthemums. But it was his aunt's attire as she came forward to
welcome him, that confirmed his fears. Frances always changed for dinner, which
meant that she replaced her lumpy tweed skirt by a slightly longer one of rusty
silk - but there was one outfit which for decades had signalled a special
occasion: a black chenille dress whose not noticeably plunging neckline was
covered with an oriental shawl. It was this that she was wearing now, and
Quin's last hope of a quiet evening to prepare for his students vanished.
'You look very splendid,'
he said, smiling at her. 'Do we have visitors?'
'You know we do,' said Aunt
Frances, coming forward to give him her customary peck on the cheek. 'I wrote
to you.
They'll be down in a minute
- you just have time to change.'
'Actually, I don't
know, Aunt Frances! I've come straight from Yorkshire. What did you write?'
Aunt Frances frowned. She
had hoped that Quin would come prepared and joyful. 'That I've invited the
Placketts. Verena and her mother.' And as Quin remained silent: 'I knew Lady
Plackett as a girl - surely she told you? We were together at finishing
school.'
She looked at Quin and felt
a deep unease. The signs of displeasure were only too familiar to her after
twenty years of guardianship: Quin's nose was looking particularly broken, his
forehead had crumpled into craters of the kind seen on pictures of the moon.
'Verena's one of my
students, Aunt Frances. It would be very wrong for me to treat her in a way
that is different from the rest.'
Relief coursed through Aunt
Frances. It was fear of seeming to single Verena out that was holding him back,
nothing more.
'Well, of course I see
that, and so does she. In fact she's said already that she expects no special
treatment while you are working out of doors, but Lady Plackett is a friend -
it would be very strange for me to refuse to entertain her daughter.'
Quin nodded, smiled - and
the devastated features recom-posed themselves into that of a personable man.
Already he felt compunction: Aunt Frances must have been lonelier than he
realized if she could contemplate entertaining the Placketts. Perhaps it had
all been a mask, her unsociability, her stated desire to be alone - and he
wondered, as he had not done for a long time, just how hurt she had been over
her rejection on the Border all those years ago.
'That's all right, I'm sure
it'll all work out splendidly. I'd better go and change.'
But before he could make
his way to the tower, he heard, somewhere above him, a cough. It was not a shy
tentative cough, it was a clarion cough signalling an intention - and Quin,
searching for its source, now saw a figure standing on the upstairs landing.
Verena, who had read so
much, had also read that no man can resist the sight of a beautiful woman
descending a noble staircase. She had watched Quin's arrival out of her bedroom
window and now, gowned simply but becomingly in bottle-green Celanese, she
placed one hand on the carved bannister, gathered up her skirt, and while her
mother waited unselfishly in the shadows, began to make her way downstairs.
The descent began
splendidly. Not only the long back, the long legs of the Croft-Ellises came to
her aid, but the training she had received before her presentation at court.
Verena, who had kicked her diamante-encrusted train backwards with unerring aim
as she retreated from Their Majesties, could hardly fail to walk with poise and
dignity towards her host.
The first flight was
accomplished and Quin stood as she had expected, his head thrown back,
watching. She was not quite ready yet to utter the words she had prepared, but
almost. 'You cannot imagine what a pleasure it is to be in Bowmont after all we
have heard of it,' was what she planned to say.
But she didn't say it. She
didn't, in fact, say anything coherent. For someone - and Aunt Frances was
beginning to suspect the second housemaid whose father was a Socialist - had
once more opened a door.
The puppy was not primarily
interested in Verena, it was
Aunt Frances that he
desired, but as he passed the staircase, the mountaineering thirst which had
sent him dashing at the running board of the Buick reasserted itself. With a
growl of aspiration, he gathered himself together and leapt, managing to reach
the bottom step at the same time as Verena completed her descent.
Verena did not tread the
puppy underfoot, nor did she fall flat on her face. Anyone else would have done
so, but not Verena. She did, however, stumble badly, throw out an arm, stagger
— and land in disarray on her knees.
Quin, of course, was beside
her in an instant to help her up - and to lead her to a chair where, being a
Croft-Ellis, she at once made light of her mishap.
'It is nothing,' she said,
as brave British girls in school stories have said for generations, spraining
their ankles, biting their lips as they are carried away on gates.
But about the puppy it was
more difficult to be charitable, especially as she had torn the lining of her
dress, and Lady Plackett, hurrying down to aid her daughter, did not even make
the attempt.
'What an extraordinary
creature!' she said. 'Does it belong to one of the servants?'
Miss Somerville, mortified,
said the puppy was going to the village carpenter on the following day and
tried to catch it, but it was Quin who seized the little dog, upended it, and
examined it with the intensity which zoologists devote to a hitherto
undescribed species.
'Amazing!' he said,
grinning at his aunt. 'Those abdominal whiskers must be unique surely? Does
Barker know that he is to be the most fortunate of men?
Miss Somerville, not amused
by his levity, said Barker was behind with repairs to the pews in the church
and would presumably know his duty, and carried the dog from the room.
In spite of this
inauspicious beginning, dinner went off well and Miss Somerville, reviewing the
evening in the privacy of her bedroom, had every reason to be satisfied.
Perhaps Quin's chivalry had been aroused by Verena's unfortunate descent; at
any rate he was attentive and charming and Verena said everything that was
proper. She admired the portrait of the Somervilles, even declaring that the
Basher's face was full of character; she was able to be intelligent about
farming, for her uncle in Rutland not only bred Border Leicesters but had a
prize herd of Charolais cattle. And when Miss Somerville mentioned - trying to
make a joke of it -Quin's intention of making the house over to the Trust, the
Placketts had been as incredulous and aghast as she had hoped.
'You cannot be serious,
Professor!' Lady Plackett had exclaimed. And Verena, risking a somewhat
outspoken remark said: 'Forgive me, but I would feel as though I was betraying
my unborn children.'
In fact Verena, throughout
the evening, said all the things that Frances had been thinking. Verena was
sound on the subject of refugees and had, when Quin was out of the room,
expressed satisfaction that an Austrian girl in her year would not be coming up
with the others later that night. She was able to trace a connection between
the Croft-Ellises and the Somervilles, distant but reassuring, and what she
said about the puppy was exactly what Miss Somerville herself had been thinking
- it really was kinder in cases of this sort to drown the little
things at birth.
'A very pleasant girl,'
said Miss Somerville, as Martha came to bring her her bedtime cocoa.
A medieval monk bent on
poverty, chastity and the subjugation of the flesh would have been entirely at
home in Miss Somerville's bedroom. The window was open, letting in gusts of the
damp night air, the rugs on the bare floorboards were worn, the mattress on the
four-poster had been lumpy when Frances came to Bowmont and was lumpy still.
Martha agreed. 'She's made
a good impression below stairs,' she said, not thinking it necessary to add
that a Hottentot with small pox would have done the same if it ensured that
Bowmont remained in private hands and that the servants' jobs were safe.
It was Martha who had gone
with Frances to the house of her fiance on the Border, Martha who had come back
after twenty-four hours and kept her peace for forty years about what had
happened there - but even Martha could go too far.
'Why don't you let me get
you a hot-water bottle?' she asked now, for her mistress, in spite of the
success of the evening, was looking tired and drawn and the cold did nothing
for her arthritis.
'Certainly not!' snapped
Frances. 'On December the 1st I have a bottle and not a day earlier - you know
that perfectly well.' But she allowed Martha to pick up the battered silver
hair brush and brush out her sparse grey hair. 'I take it it was Elsie who let
the puppy out?' she said presently.
Martha nodded. 'She's soft,
that girl. It's with Comely not having anything to do with it. She hears it
crying.'
'Well, see that it's taken
down to Barker first thing in the morning; it nearly caused a nasty accident.'
'It'll have to be the day
after. He's away over at Amble tomorrow. They're breaking up a ship and he's
got some wood ordered.'
Lying in bed, her icy feet
curled under her, Frances again thought how well the evening had gone - and in
any case she meant to go and live in the village once Quin was married. True,
Quin had not shown any particular interest in Verena, but that would come - and
glad of an excuse, she picked Pride and Prejudice off the bedside
table. ''She is tolerable; but not handsome enough to tempt me,' Mr
Darcy had said when he first saw Elizabeth Bennet. Oh yes, there was plenty of
time.
Unaware of his aunt's
hopes, and deeply unconcerned with the fate of Verena Plackett, Quin stood by
the window of his tower room and looked out at the ocean and the moon,
continually obscured by fierce black clouds. It was still raining but the
barometer was rising. It had been a risk bringing the students up so late in
the year, but if Northumberland did choose to lay on an Indian summer, they
would find themselves most richly rewarded. The autumn could be breathtakingly
lovely here.
Quin had slept in the room
at the top of the tower since his grandfather had led him there at the age of
eight, a bewildered orphan in foreign clothes and a pair of outsize spectacles
supposed to strengthen his eyes after an attack of measles. Separated by three
flights of stairs from his nurse, laid to rest each night under the pelt of a
polar bear which the Basher had shot in Alaska, Quin had gone to bed in terror
-yet even then he would not have changed his eyrie for the world.
The students were due any
moment now: the bus hired to fetch them from Newcastle could bump its way right
down to Anchorage Bay. He'd been down earlier to check that the arrangements
were in order: the stove lit in the little common room, the Bunsen burners
connected to the Calor gas, the blankets in the dormitories above the lab
properly aired. Everything was in hand yet he felt restless, and hardly aware
of what he was doing, he picked up the guitar in the corner of the room and
began to tune the strings.
Quin's guitar studies had
not progressed very far. He had in fact stayed stuck on Book Two of the manual
and his friends at Cambridge had always been unpleasant about his performance,
putting their fingers in their ears or leaving the room. But though he could
play only a few of the pieces in the book, they covered the normal range of
human emotion: "Tiptoe Through the Tulips" was cheerful and outgoing;
"Evening Elegy" was lyrical and romantic - and the "Mississippi
Moan" was - well, a moan.
It was this piece which had
particularly emptied the room when he played it at college, but Quin was much
attached to it. Now, as the plaintive lament from the Deep South stole through
the room, Quin realized that he had not chosen the "Moan" at random.
He did in fact feel a sense of disquiet… of unease… and a few broken chords
later, he realized why.
For it had to be admitted
that he had not behaved well over Felton's efforts to bring Ruth to Bowmont.
Roger worked ceaselessly for the students and deputized willingly for him,
enduring all the boredom of committees. If he had set his heart on bringing the
girl to Northumberland, Quin should have helped him. It would have been
perfectly simple to work something out, nor was he in the least troubled by the
disapproval of the Placketts. The truth was, he had acted selfishly, not
wanting to be involved in the girl's emotionalism, her endless ability to live
deep.
Well, it was done now, and
the "Moan" - as it so often did - had cleared the air. Putting regret
behind him, Quin moved to his desk and picked up Hackenstreicher's latest
letter to Nature. Time to put this idiot out of his misery once and
for all. Pulling the typewriter towards him, he inserted a clean sheet of
paper.
Dear Sir, he wrote, It
is perhaps worth pointing out in connection with Professor Hackenstreicher's
communication ('Nature, August 6th 1938) that his examination of a
single cranial cast of Ceratopsian Styracosaurus scarcely warrants a
rejection of Broom's reconstruction of evolution from a common stock. Not only
was the cast incomplete, but its provenance is disputed by…
He was still writing as the
bus passed the gates behind the house and bumped its way towards the beach.
Ruth woke very early in the
dormitory above the boathouse. Everyone else still slept; Pilly, beside her,
was curled up against the expected disasters of the coming day - only a few
tufts of hair showed above the grey blanket. At the end of the row of bunks, Dr
Elke's slumbering bulk beside the door protected her charges.
Of the previous night, Ruth
remembered only the driving rain, the sudden chill as they scuttled indoors
from the stuffy bus… that and the monotonous slap of the waves on the beach.
But now something had
happened - and at first it seemed to her that that something was simply… light.
She dressed quickly, crept
past her sleeping friends, past Dr Elke, twitching as she rode through Valhalla
in her dreams, climbed down the ladder and opened the door.
'Oh!' said Ruth, and walked
forward, unbelieving, bewildered… dazzled. How could this have happened
overnight, this miracle? How could there be so much light, so much movement;
how could everything be so terribly there}
The sun was rising out of a
silver sea - a sea which shimmered, which changed almost moment by moment. And
the sky changed too as she watched it; first it was rose and amethyst, then
turquoise… yet already a handful of newly fledged cotton-wool clouds waited
their turn…
And the air moved too - how
it moved! You didn't need to breathe, it breathed itself. It wasn't wind now,
not yet, just this newly created, newly washed air which smelled of salt and
seaweed and the beginning of the world.
There was too much. Too
much beauty, too much air to breathe, too much sky to turn one's face to… and
unbelievably too much sea. She had imagined it so often: the flat, grey, rather
sad expanse of the North Sea, but this…
A shaft of brilliant light
pierced the surface and caught the needle of a lighthouse on a distant island…
There were fields on this ocean: patches of shining brightness, others like
gunmetal and calm oases like lagoons. It never stopped being, the sea,
she had not been prepared for that.
The tide was out. Taking
off her shoes and stockings, she felt the cool, ribbed sand massaging her bare
feet. There were acres of it; golden, unsullied… Moving drunkenly towards the
edge of the water, she began to calm down enough to notice the inhabitants of
this light-dappled world… Three heavy, ecclesiastical-looking birds diving from
a rock -cormorants she thought - but could not name the narrow-winged flock
whose whiteness was so intense that they seemed to be lit up from within.
Now she came to the first
rock pool and here was a simpler, more containable, delight. Dr Felton had
taught her well; she knew that Latin names of the anemones and brittle stars,
the little darting shrimps, but this was the world of fairy tale. Here were
submerged forests, miniature bays of sand, pebbles like jewels…
By the rim of the ocean,
she paused and put a foot into the water, and gasped. It was like being
electrocuted, so cold. Even the foam carried a charge… and then almost at once
she became accustomed to it. No, that was wrong; you couldn't become accustomed
to this invigorating, fierce stab of cold and cleanness, but you could want
more of it and more.
I didn't know, she thought.
I didn't imagine that anything could be like this, could make one feel so…
purged… so clean… so alone and unimportant and yet so totally oneself. For a
moment, she wanted everyone she loved to be there -her parents and Mishak and
Mishak's beloved Marianne risen from the dead, to come and stand here beside
the sea. But then the sky performed one of its conjuring tricks, sending in a
fleet of purple clouds which moved over the newly risen sun, so that for a
moment everything changed again - became swirling and dark and turbulent… and
then out came the sun once more, strengthened… higher in the sky… and she
thought, no, here I can be alone because there isn't any alone or not alone;
there's only light and air and water and I am part of it and everyone I love is
part of it, but it's outside time, it's outside needing and wanting.
It was at this point of
exaltation that she noticed a small white sail and a boat coming round the
point and making for the bay.
Quin too had woken at dawn
and made his way to the sheltered cove by Bowmont Mill where he kept the dinghy
when it was not in use. He'd been glad of an excuse to get away from the house
and bring the boat round for the students; glad that the weather had lifted:
the golden day was an unexpected bonus. For the rest he was without thought,
feeling the wind, tending his sail…
He saw the lone figure as soon
as he rounded the point and even from a distance realized that the girl,
whoever she was, was in a state of bliss. The breeze whipped her hair, one hand
held the folds of her skirt as she moved backwards and forwards, playing with
the waves.
The obvious images were
soon abandoned. This was not Botticelli's Venus risen from the foam, not Undine
welcoming the dawn, but something simpler and, under the circumstances, more
surprising. This was Ruth.
She stood quietly watching
as he dropped his sail and allowed the dinghy to run onto the sand. It was not
until she waded out to help him, pulling the boat up with each lift of the
waves, that he spoke.
'An unexpected pleasure,'
he said idiotically - but for Ruth the creased, familiar smile threatened for a
moment the impersonality of this scoured and ravishing world. 'I didn't think
you were coming.'
'My mother bullied me and
Uncle Mishak. Oh, but imagine; if they hadn't. Imagine if I'd missed all this!'
'You like it?' asked Quin,
who found it advisable to confine himself to banalities, for it had been
disconcerting how well she had fitted the dream of those who come in from the
sea: the long-haired woman waiting by the shore.
She shook her head
wonderingly. 'I didn't think there could be anything like this. You lose
yourself in music, but in the end music is about how to live; it comes back to
you. But this… I suppose one can have petty thoughts here, but I don't
see how.'
The dingy was beached now.
Quin took a rope from the bows and tied it round a jagged rock - and together
they made their way towards the boathouse. Since she had walked in a trance
towards the rim of the sea, Ruth had never once looked backwards to the land.
Now she stopped dead and said: 'Oh, what is that? What is that place?'
'What do you mean?' Quin,
at first, didn't understand the question.
'Up there. On the cliff.
That building.'
'That? Why surely you know?
That's Bowmont.'
Ruth was unlucky. She could
have seen it in driving rain or in winter when the wind blew so hard that no
one had time to look upwards. She could have seen it, as many had, when a
shipwreck brought weeping women to the shore, or on a day when the notorious
'fret' made it no more than a threatening, looming shape. But she saw it on a
halcyon morning and she saw it, almost, from the sea. She saw it - half home,
half fortress - with the pale limestone of its walls turned to gold and the
white horses licking softly against the cliffs it guarded. Gulls wheeled over
the tower, and the long windows threw back the dazzle of the sun.
'You said it was a cold
house on a cliff,' said Ruth when she could speak again.
'So it is. You'll see when
you came to lunch on Sunday.'
Ruth shook her head. 'No,'
she said quietly, 'I shan't be coming to lunch on Sunday. Nor on any other
day.'
It was Kenneth Easton who
had told the students that Verena would not be coming to the boathouse.
'She's staying up at
Bowmont,' he said as the train steamed out of King's Cross Station. 'The
Somervilles have invited her.' And as they stared at him: 'It's only natural
-her family and the Professor's belong to the same world. It's what you'd
expect.'
'Well, I wouldn't,' Sam had
said staunchly. 'It's not like the Professor to single one student out.'
'Lady Plackett's going to
be there as well. She and the Professor's aunt are old friends. And there's
going to be a dance for Verena's birthday. The Somervilles insisted,' said
Kenneth, well briefed in Verena's version of events.
For Pilly and Janet, the
thought that they wouldn't have to share a dormitory with Verena came as a
welcome relief, but Ruth had been silent for a while, staring out at the flat,
rain-sodden fields. Quin's story and hers was over - yet it had hurt a little
that in spite of what he had said about Verena, he cared for her after all.
It had not taken her long
to school her thoughts and tell herself how little this concerned her, but she
meant what she said about not coming to lunch. Exaltation was one thing, but
seeing Verena Plackett lording it in the house which, if this had been a proper
marriage, would have been her home, was quite another.
One could expect only so
much uplift, even from the sea.
Pilly had come closest in
the speculations about Verena's pyjamas. They were blue and mannish, but
elasticated at the ankle for she wore them to do her exercises.
Verena always exercised
with vigour, but this morning her press-ups had a particular elan and her
thighs scissored the air with a special purpose, for she had decided, if all
went as she hoped and she became Mrs Somerville, to accompany Quin on his
expeditions, and fitness now was imperative.
Her window took in a view
of the bay and the boathouse where the other students still slept. Verena had
no objection to the laboratory; as Quinton's helpmeet and fellow researcher,
she approved of a field station so close to the house, but the bringing up of
students would not be encouraged. Quin's future, it seemed to her, lay more in
some role like President of the Royal Society or head of an institute - it was
surely a waste of time for such a man to spend time in teaching.
Next door, Lady Plackett
heard the familiar bumps and thumps with satisfaction. Her daughter had made an
excellent impression the night before and she herself, encouraged by the warmth
of her welcome, had decided to stay for the duration of the field course so as
to help in the preparations for Verena's dance. As for Miss Somerville - whom
she had heard spoken of as unsociable to a degree - her friendliness was now
explained. If her nephew really was contemplating giving his home away, it would
be very much in her interest to see him married, and to a girl who would not
permit such folly.
At a quarter to eight
precisely, Verena and Lady Plackett descended and were greeted with relief by
their hostess. Neither of them wore fur coats or asked about central heating,
and though Miss Somerville made a suitable enquiry about the night they had
passed, she realized at once that it was superfluous.
'Verena always sleeps
well,' said Lady Plackett, and Verena, with a calm smile agreed.
Comely now arrived, and the
old labrador with a white muzzle, and were permitted by Verena to wag their
tails at least half a dozen times before being requested to 'Sit!' which they
instantly did. Her credentials as a dog lover established, she moved over to
the sideboard where she helped herself to bacon, sausages and scrambled eggs.
'Verena never puts on
weight,' commented Lady Plackett fondly, and Miss Somerville saw that this
might be so. 'All the Croft-Ellises can eat as much as they wish without
putting on an ounce.'
But as they progressed to
toast and marmalade, it was natural to enquire about the Professor. 'Has he
breakfasted already?' Verena asked.
'Quin just has coffee over
in his rooms. He's gone to Bowmont Cove to fetch the dinghy.'
The Placketts exchanged
glances. If Quin was going to keep himself to himself in the tower and creep
off to the boathouse at dawn, it might be necessary for Verena to change her
routine.
Since work on the first day
was not due to begin until 9.30, the Placketts accepted an invitation to look
round the rest of the house which, arriving late the previous afternoon, they
had not yet explored. Politely admiring everything they saw, they had the added
satisfaction of being able to make comparisons. In the library, Verena was able
to point out that her Croft-Ellis uncle also owned a set of Bewick woodcuts
which were, perhaps, a little more extensive, and in the morning room Lady
Plackett was reminded of the Petit Point stool covers which her grandmother had
stitched when she first came to Rutland as a bride.
'In no way better than
these, dear Miss Somerville, though the Duchess asked if she could copy them!'
A tour of the grounds
followed. Crossing the lawn and the bridge over the ha-ha, they passed the door
of the walled garden and Miss Somerville asked if they would like to see it.
'Ah yes,' said Lady
Plackett. 'It's well known, isn't it? Of course we have a famous walled garden
in Rutland too, as you probably know.'
Miss Somerville resisted
the impulse to say that there was nowhere like her walled garden, and opened
the door. She always wanted to put her finger to her lips when she did this,
but Verena and Lady Plackett had already begun to admire, in loud, clear
voices, the garden's lay-out, though Verena was able to point out a spot of canker
on the stem of a viburnum which she thought might interest Elke Sonderstrom.
But though she endeavoured
to conceal it, Verena was growing restive.
'I mustn't be late for
work,' she said laughingly. The idea of Professor Somerville already mingling
with the students was not attractive; she had particularly wanted to arrive in
his company and make clear her special status as a house guest. 'I'll have to
go and get my things.'
'We'll go in round the
front,' said Miss Somerville, never able to resist a little early-morning
viewing through her binoculars.
Lady Plackett's praise of
the view from the sea terrace was warm enough to satisfy even Miss Somerville,
but Verena, as she requested for a moment the loan of Miss Somerville's
binoculars, seemed for some reason to be displeased.
'How extraordinary,' she
said, fixing her eyes on two people standing together by the edge of the sea.
One was Professor Somerville, looking unfamiliar in a navy sweater and rubber
boots. The other was a girl, barefooted, with wind-blown, tossing hair. And to
her mother: 'Unless I'm mistaken, Miss Berger has managed to get herself up
here after all. I wonder what strings she pulled to achieve that
Lady Plackett took the
binoculars. Her sight was less keen than her daughter's but she too agreed that
the girl was Ruth. She turned to Miss Somerville. 'This is unfortunate,' she
said. 'And quite irregular. The girl is a Jewish refugee who seems to think
that she is entitled to every sort of privilege.'
'One must not belittle her,
of course,' said Verena, anxious to be fair. 'She works extremely hard. She is
a waitress in a cafe in the north of London.'
'They say she brings in all
sorts of trade,' said Lady Plackett meaningfully.
Miss Somerville sighed. She
took back her binoculars, but she did not put them to her eyes. If there was
one thing she did not wish to examine so early in the morning, it was a Jewish
waitress on Bowmont beach.
The first day of the field
course was, by tradition, spent close to Bowmont's shores. Though everyone
worked hard, learning the sampling techniques they would need to make proper
observations, there was a festive air among the students - for if this was
science it was also a marvellous seaside holiday and the experienced staff made
no attempt to curb their pleasure. Indeed Dr Felton himself, his hornrims
turning to russet or amber to match the creatures he fished from the pools,
looked like a boy let out of school - and Dr Elke, pacing the littoral in
shorts and a straining, reindeer-covered sweater was a sight to make the gods
themselves rejoice.
Which was as well, for the
coast of North Northumberland was continuing to drive Ruth a little mad. She
knew it was not really British to feel like this, but her state of ecstasy,
though she tried to control it, continued to get the better of her. It got her
by the throat when she saw a wave lift itself against the light so as to make a
window for the sky; it came at her with the dazzle of a gull's wing; it was
transmitted through her bare feet as she followed the wave ripples in the sand.
She filled her pockets with shells and when her pockets were full, she fetched her
sponge bag and filled that. She bit into the bladders of seaweed, choked on the
salty liquid, and did it again.
And she beachcombed…
'Look, oh look?
cried Ruth every ten minutes - and then whoever was closest had to go and
examine what was undoubtedly a plank from the treasure chest of a Spanish
galleon, or a coconut from the distant Indies. Dr Felton might point out,
gently, the words 'Bentham and Son, Sanitary Engineers' on the back of the
plank, making the galleon theory unlikely; Janet might turn the coconut round
so as to reveal the stamp of a Newcastle grocer - but it made no difference to
Ruth whose next find was as mysterious and magical as the one before.
Verena's approach to the
delights of the seashore were different. She had appeared after breakfast in a
white cable -knit sweater as pristine as her lab coat and now, followed by
Kenneth Easton who received the contents of her net as once he had received the
contents of her stomach, she moved unerringly over banks of seaweed and through
rocky pools.
'Not, I think, a bearded
horse mussel?' said Verena, addressing Dr Felton, but throwing a sidelong
glance at the Professor who was showing Huw and Sam how to sink a box quadrant
into a patch of sand. 'A horse mussel, but not, I would hazard, bearded?'
Dr Felton, examining the
creature she had prised from the rock, agreed with her, and Kenneth, moved to
spontaneous admiration, said: 'Really, Verena, you are quite brilliant with
bivalves!'
But it was not only
bivalves with which Verena was brilliant. The other students might be glad to
recognize a limpet, but Verena could tell a slit limpet from a keyhole limpet;
she knew of a whole armoury of limpets; tortoiseshell limpets and slipper
limpets and blue-rayed limpets, and was aware that the brave periwinkle,
fighting dessication on the higher rocks, might be smooth or edible or rough.
But Ruth, Here in this
world which washed one free of pettiness, did not, as she would have done in
London, go to the reference books in the laboratory to search for mussels that
were yet more bearded, or a bristlier bristle worm than the one turned up by
Verena's spade. She did not want to read about mussels, she wanted to hold one
and marvel at the blue and black striations of its shell. She was free of the
urge to excel and succeed; she even gave up her complicated manoeuvres to keep
out of the Professor's way - and when she found her most valuable treasure of
the morning, it was to him she came.
'Look!' said Ruth for the
hundredth time. 'Oh, look! Emeralds!' He held out his hands and she
tipped the smooth green stones into his palms.
'Could they be?' she said.
'My great aunt had a bracelet and the stones looked just like that!'
He didn't laugh at her.
There were gem stones on this coast: carnelians and agates and amethysts — and
leading her gently away from her dream, he said: 'Only the sea does that -
makes stones so perfect and so smooth. You could hire the best jeweller in the
world and set him to work for a year and a day and he wouldn't get anywhere
near.'
He took one and held it to
the light and as she came closer to look, he thought how wonderfully emeralds
would have become her with her dark eyes and lion-coloured hair.
But Verena, never far from
the Professor, now appeared by their side. 'Good heavens, girl,' she said,
peering at the stones. 'They're just bits of bottle glass - surely you knew
that? Even in Vienna they must have bottles.'
She looked at Quin, ready
to share the joke of Ruth's idiocy - but he had turned away and was putting the
stones back into Ruth's cupped hands as carefully as if they really were
precious jewels.
'Bottles can be extremely
important,' he said, holding her eyes. 'It isn't necessary for me to tell you
that.'
And she flushed and smiled
and moved away, feeling a glow of warmth, for whether they were emeralds or not
mattered very little, but that he remembered what she had told him, there by
the Danube - that mattered a lot!
At lunchtime Verena,
approaching the Professor, said: 'Isn't it time we went to the house? Luncheon
is at one o'clock, I understand?'
But here she suffered a
reverse.
'Yes, you go; my aunt's a
stickler for punctuality-. I'll stay down here - I don't usually bother much
with lunch.'
This remark caused
considerable amusement to Dr Elke who had past experience of Quin's conviction
that he did not eat in the middle of the day, and gathering two of the girls to
help, she made her way to the boathouse where she unwound an extra coil of
sausages which Pilly proceeded to fry with an expertise which amazed her
friends.
'Why aren't you afraid of
sausages?' asked Janet, as Pilly deftly turned the sizzling, ferociously
spitting objects.
'They're much more
dangerous than the experiments we do.'
'I don't have to learn
sausages,' said Pilly.
But in the afternoon Verena
came into her own again, for the Professor took boatloads of students out into
the bay to show them how to sweep for plankton and Verena, who had sailed in
India and crewed for her cousin at Cowes, was in her element. She had only to
twitch once at its toggle, and the outboard motor roared into life; she knew
exactly what to do with sails, she rowed like an Amazon, so that it was natural
that as the students changed places, Verena should remain by the Professor and
help.
Secure in her position, she
was extremely gracious to her inexperienced classmates, helping them into the
dinghy and giving them instructions on seamanship so as to leave the Professor
free to show them how to work the nets. Only when Ruth came aboard in her turn
and offered to take one of the oars, did Verena's graciousness desert her.
'Can you row?' she said
snubbingly. 'I didn't think anyone had boats in Vienna.'
But Ruth, though she set a
murderous pace, said nothing. She was in the grip of a new and noble resolution
which, late that night, she proceeded to share with her friends.
'I have decided,' she
announced, 'to love Verena Plackett!'
The students were sitting
round a bonfire of driftwood, roasting potatoes in the light of the moon - a
dramatic setting in keeping with Ruth's uplifted state. Only Kenneth Easton was
absent. He had wandered away by himself for it had been hard for him seeing
Verena go up to the house to dine with the Professor. Kenneth had examined his
face carefully in the scrap of mirror which was all the students had to shave
by and couldn't help noticing how much more regular his features were than the
Professor's, how much less broken-looking his nose, and if he smoked a pipe he
was certain he would have been able to keep it alight for reasonable stretches
of time. Yet it was clear that it was the Professor Verena preferred and now,
alone and melancholy, he gazed up at the lighted windows of Bowmont and sighed.
'I mean it,' persisted Ruth
as her friends stared at her. 'I'm entirely serious.'
'You're mad,' said Janet,
spearing another potato. 'Raving mad. Verena is entirely and utterly awful.'
'Yes, I know,' said Ruth.
'So there is no point at all in trying to like her. Liking Verena
would be to attempt the impossible. But there was an old philosopher who used
to come and see us in Vienna - he had a long white beard and he used to
meditate every day on a bench outside the Stock Exchange - and what he said
was: "You must love what you cannot like." He said it quite often.'
'I don't know what that
means,' said Pilly sadly - and a thin bespectacled youth called Simon said he
didn't either.
'It sounds better in
German,' Ruth admitted, 'but what it means is that though you can't like
everybody, you can love them deep down - in fact the more you don't like them,
the more important it is that you should. You have to love them as though they
were your brother or sister… as part of the created world. As a fellow sinner,'
said Ruth, getting excited and dropping her potato in the sand.
Sam, though he knew it was
not a Lancelot-like remark, said she was talking nonsense, and Janet pointed
out that sinners were a doddle compared to Verena.
'Sinners are human,'
she said.
But nothing could deflect
Ruth from the noble path she had chosen and she quoted yet another European
sage, the great Sigmund Freud, who had said that a thing cannot become lovable
until it is loved.
'Like Beauty and the Beast.
You have to kiss it before it becomes a prince.'
As was inevitable the
conversation now became ribald, but as she accepted the less burnt half of
Sam's potato, Ruth's eyes were shining with moral virtue and the consciousness
of right.
'You'll see. I'll begin
tomorrow when we go to Howcroft. I shall love her all day.'
'Barker's taken him then?'
asked Miss Somerville encountering Martha the following morning as she returned
from the village. 'He's agreed?'
The puppy had been conveyed
to the carpenter's house before breakfast, but Martha's kind, round face looked
un-accustomedly shifty. 'No, he hasn't. He won't have him.'
'Won't have him?'
Miss Somerville was incredulous. 'Did you point out that the work on the pews
is two months overdue?'
'Yes, I did. He says his
wife's got asthma and she's expecting and the doctor said she wasn't to go near
anything with hair.'
'I must say I find that
extraordinary. People like that wouldn't have heard of asthma in the
old days. It makes you wonder whether education is such a good thing.' She bent
to pick up her gardening trug. 'Where is it, then?'
'He offered to shoot it for
me,' said Martha. 'He said it wouldn't feel a thing - well, that's true enough;
he's done enough poaching in his time, Barker has - he could knock down a hare
at fifty yards and no trouble.'
Miss Somerville
straightened her back. Her face was expressionless.
'So you agreed? It's been
shot?'
'No, I didn't,' said Martha
shortly, and watched her employer's hands relax on the handle of the trug.
'Drowning the things at birth before their eyes are open is one thing, but
shooting them in cold blood is another. If you want it shot, you can give the
instructions yourself.'
'Where is it, then?'
'One of the students took
it. I met her coming up for the milk. She says she'll keep it; they're off to
Howcroft Point, I thought she might as well with Lady Plackett not being too
fond of it and company coming.'
Miss Somerville nodded. The
Rothleys were coming for drinks and the Stanton-Derbys, to welcome Verena and
talk about the dance, and she didn't really want any more jokes about the
little dog. She was setting off across the lawn when Martha said: 'Who's this
Richard Wagner, then? Some kind of musician fellow?'
'He was a composer. An
extremely noisy one, with a reprehensible private life. Why?'
'This girl… the one who's
taken the puppy… she said he had a step-daughter with eyes like that - Wagner
did. One blue and one brown, same as the puppy. Daniella she was called.'
'The student?'
'No, the stepdaughter.'
Deciding not to pursue the
matter, Miss Somerville made her way to the garden. She thought she would
postpone talking to Lady Plackett about the extraordinary: behaviour of the
carpenter. After all, it was none of her business.
Ruth, meanwhile, had
reached the boathouse.
'What is it?' enquired Dr
Elke, looking at Comely's love child which was climbing with passionate
enthusiasm over her feet.
'It's a mixture,' admitted
Ruth.
Dr Elke said she could see
that and removed her shoe from the puppy's grasp.
'But full of personality?'
suggested Ruth. 'Though not perhaps strictly beautiful.'
'No, not strictly.'
'Voltaire wasn't beautiful
either,' said Ruth, 'but he used to say that if he had half an hour to explain
away his face, he could seduce the Queen of France.'
'More than half an hour
would be necessary in this case,' said Dr Elke, and told Ruth to pass the
hammers, for she was checking supplies for the day's fossil hunting on the
cliffs off Howcroft Point.
Ruth did so. There was a
pause. Then: 'I thought he might come with us on the bus? Martha said he was
very fond of transportation and he's never sick.'
'Ask the Professor,' said
Elke and went into the lab.
Since Quin at that moment
came down the path, Ruth repeated her request.
'I thought he might be
useful,' she said.
'Really?' Quin's eyebrows
were raised in enquiry. 'What sort of usefulness had you in mind?'
'Well, dogs are always
digging up bones. Suppose he found something interesting? The femur of a
torosaurus, perhaps?'
'That would certainly be
interesting on the coal measures,' said Quin drily. But seeing Ruth's face, he
relented. 'Keep him out of the way; I suppose he can't do much harm on the
moors.'
By the time the bus
deposited them at Howcroft Point, the puppy had acquired the kind of following
that Voltaire himself would have envied. Pilly had held him on her knees
throughout the journey, Janet spoke to him in a voice which made Ruth
understand what happened in the backs of motor cars, and Huw was on hand to
lift him over boulders which defeated even his intrepid scramblings.
It was another perfect day.
The cliffs here were topped by heather and gorse, the curlews called - but the
work now was hard. For here, in the carboniferous outcrop which ran from the
moors out onto the shore, were embedded those creatures that determined all
subsequent life on earth. Fragments of ancient corals, whorled molluscs, each
characteristic of the layered zones, had to be prised from the rock, labelled,
wrapped and carried back to the laboratory. And since no day is complete
without the chance for self-improvement, Ruth was fortunate, for the
opportunities for loving Verena Plackett on Howcroft Point were endless. Always
at the Professor's heels, she tapped unerringly with her brand-new hammer,
finding not only an undoubted specimen of caninia, but also a crinoid
complete with tentacles - and laughed merrily whenever Pilly mispronounced a
word.
Since the tide was high,
they had lunch above the strand on a patch of heather while the puppy consumed
sandwiches, fell in and out of rabbit holes and fell suddenly and utterly
asleep on Huw's collecting bag. Most of the students too were glad to be lazy,
but Ruth, accustomed to the ascent of high places from which to say "Wunderbar!"
scrambled to the top of the hill which commanded a view of the coast for miles,
and the moors inland, still showing glimmers of purple. It was not till she
caught the whiff of tobacco from behind a boulder that she realized she was not
alone.
'It's quite something,
isn't it?' said Quin, gesturing with his pipe at the low line of Holy Island to
the south, and the dramatic pinnacle of Howcroft Rock. 'I'm glad you've seen it
like this - autumn and winter are best for the colours.'
She nodded. 'People always
say that views are breathtaking, don't they? But they should be breathgiving,
surely?' She turned to smile at him. 'And I don't just mean the wind.'
For a few minutes they
stood side by side in silence, watching the dazzle of spray over the rocks, the
unbelievable dark blue of the water. A curlew called above them, the scent of
vanilla drifted from a late flowering bush of gorse.
'I came here for the first
time when I was ten,' said Quin. 'I bicycled from Bowmont with my hammer and my
Boy's Own Book of Fossils. I started to chip at the rock - and
suddenly there it was. An absolutely perfect cycad, as clear and unmistakable
as truth itself. That was when I knew I was immortal - that I personally
without the slightest doubt would solve the riddle of the universe.'
'Yes, I know that one.
Things that are for you. No doubts, no hesitation.'
'Music in your case, I
suppose,' he said resignedly, waiting for the ubiquitous Mozart to appear on
the horizon, towing Heini in his wake.
'Yes. The first time I
heard the Zillers play. But…' She shook her head, 'I loved the Grundlsee. I
really loved it, the lake and the berries and the flowers, but when we went
there it was still part of the way I'd always lived… with the university and
people talking about psychoanalysis and all that. But here… the first morning
by the sea… and now, still… I don't understand what's happened.' She looked up
at him and he saw the bewilderment on her face. 'I feel as though I shall be
homesick for this place all my life… for the sea… but how can I be? What has it
to do with me? It's Vienna I'm homesick for. I must be.'
His silence lasted so long
that she turned her head. It seemed to her that his face had changed - he
looked younger, more vulnerable, and when he spoke it was without his usual
ease.
'Ruth, if you wanted it to
be different… If- '
He broke off. A shadow had
fallen between them and the sun. Tall and looming, Verena Plackett stood there,
holding out a piece of rock.
'I wonder if you could
clear up a point for me, Professor,' she said. 'I think this must be one of the
brachiopods, but I'm not entirely sure.'
Quin did not speak to Ruth
again till after their return. He was making his way up the cliff path when he
heard footsteps and turned to find her hurrying after him, the puppy in her
arms.
'I'm sorry to bother you,
but could you be so kind as to take him up to the house? Pilly would, but she's
busy cooking and I promised Martha I'd see that he got back safely.'
'Why don't you take him
yourself? You've obviously made friends with Martha.'
'No.'
He remembered her refusal
to come to lunch, and meaning to tease her, said: 'You'll have to look at the
place sometime, you know. After all, if I'm killed before Mr Proudfoot can put
us asunder, Bowmont will be yours.'
Her reaction amazed him.
She was furious; her face distorted - he almost expected her to stamp her feet.
'How dare you talk
like that! How dare you? Mr Chamberlain said there would be no war, he
promised… and even if there is you don't have to fight in it. It was absolutely
unnecessary you going off to the navy like that, everyone said so. You could do
much more good doing scientific work. It was ostentatious and stupid and wrong?
'Come, I was only joking.'
'Exactly the sort of jokes
one would expect from an Englishman. Jokes about people being dead.'
She thrust the puppy in his
arms and stamped away down the hill.
'As a woman I was
unfortunately not able to follow the sport,' said Verena, who was engaging Lord
Rothley in a conversation about pigsticking. 'But I watched it in India and
found it quite fascinating.'
Lord Rothely mumbled
something and held out his glass to Turton who, detecting a certain glassiness
in his lordship's eye, filled it to the brim with whisky.
The party was a small one:
The Rothleys, the' Stanton-Derbys and the widowed Bobo Bainbridge, come to
welcome the Placketts and discuss the arrangements for Verena's dance. Needless
to say Verena, who had prepared so assiduously for Sir Harold in the matter of
the bony fishes, had gone through the Northumberland Gazette to
ascertain the interests of the guests, though in the case of Lord Rothley she
had been deceived a little by the small print. It was pig breeding
rather than pig sticking that interested his lordship. Her duty to him
completed, Verena moved over to Hugo Stanton-Derby standing with Lady Plackett
by the fireplace. The excellent relationship which Verena enjoyed' with her
mother had enabled them to divide their labours: Verena had repaired to the Encyclopaedia
Britannica in the library to read up about Georgian snuff boxes which
Stanton-Derby collected, while Lady Plackett immersed herself in the Financial
Times for it was as a stockbroker that he earned his living.
The resulting conversation
was as informed and intelligent as might have been expected, and when Verena
turned to the women, they found her most understanding and sympathetic about
their complaints. For as might have been expected, the refugees that Quin had
wished on them were continuing to be ungrateful and difficult. Ann Rothley's
dismissed cowman had been taken on by the Northern Opera Company and caused
havoc among the servants.
'They're all asking for
time off to go to Newcastle and hear him sing in that ridiculous opera - the
one where they burn a manuscript to keep warm. Something about Bohemians.'
And Helen's chauffeur too
was giving trouble: he was threatening to leave and go to London to try and
join a string quartet.
'Well if he does at least
you won't have to listen to all that chamber music,' said Frances.
But, of course, it wasn't
so simple - it never is.
'Actually, he's rather good
at his job,' said Helen, 'and much cheaper than an Englishman would be.'
Only with Bobo Bainbridge
did Verena not attempt to converse. Bobo, whose adored husband had dropped dead
nine months ago and whose mother-in-law did not approve of displays of grief,
now navigated through her social engagements by means of liberal doses of
Amontillado, and for women who let themselves go in this way, Verena had
nothing but contempt.
At nine o'clock, Quin took
the men to smoke and play billiards in the library and the women were left to
discuss Verena's party.
This, somewhat to Frances'
dismay, soon grew into a much larger affair than she had intended. Her
suggestion of a buffet supper and dancing to the gramophone caused Lady
Plackett considerable surprise.
'The gramophone!*
she said in offended tones. 'If it is a matter of expense…'
'No, course it isn't,'
interrupted Ann Rothley, rather put out by this gaffe, 'but actually, Frances,
there's a very good little three-piece band just starting up in Rothley - it
would be a kindness to give them work.'
So the three-piece band was
agreed on, and Helen Stan-ton-Derby (over-ruling Lady Plackett's suggestion of
lilies and stepanotis from the florist in Alnwick) said she would do the
flowers. 'There's such lovely stuff in the hedges now -traveller's joy and
rosehips… with only a little help from the gardens one can make a marvellous
show.'
'And I thought mulled
wine,' said Frances. 'Cook has an excellent recipe.'
Mulled wine, however,
affected Lady Plackett as adversely as the gramophone had done and she asked if
she could contribute to a case of champagne, an offer which Miss Somerville
refused. 'I'll speak to Quin,' she said firmly; 'he's in charge of the cellar,'
and they went on to discuss the menu and the list of guests.
Comments on Verena, as the
County drove home, were entirely favourable.
'A very sensible girl,'
said Ann Rothely and her husband grunted assent, but said he was surprised that
Quin, who'd had such beautiful girlfriends, was willing to marry somebody who,
when all was said and done, looked like a Roman senator.
His wife disagreed. 'She
has great presence. AH she needs is a really pretty dress for the dance and
she'll be as attractive as anyone could wish.'
An unexpected voice now
spoke from the back of the motor where Bobo Bainbridge had been supposed to be
asleep.
'It will have to be a very
pretty dress,' said Bobo - and closed her eyes once more.
Frances, meanwhile, had
followed Quin into the tower - a thing she did seldom - to ask his advice about
the drinks.
'Ah yes, Verena's dance.'
Quin had taken so little notice of discussions about this event that it took an
effort to recall it. 'It's on Friday week, isn't it? Does Verena want me to
look in or would she prefer to entertain her friends on her own?'
Frances looked at him in
dismay. 'But of course she wants you to be there. It would look very odd if you
weren't.' And then: 'You do like Verena, don't you?'
'She's an excellent girl,'
said Quin absently. And then: 'Who have you invited?'
'Rollo's coming up from
Sandhurst - he won the Sword of Honour, did Ann tell you? And he's bringing a
friend of his who's going to join the same regiment. And the Bainbridge twins
have got leave from the air force so - '
'From the air force}
Mick and Leo? But they can't be more than sixteen!'
'They're eighteen, actually
- they went in as cadets. Bobo was hoping one of them would stay on the ground,
but they've always done things together; they're both fully fledged pilots
now.'
'My God!' Bobo's adored
twins had kept her alive after her husband's death. When they came home, she
sobered up, became the friendly, funny person she had been throughout his
childhood.
'And both Helen's girls are
coming up from London. Caroline's going to marry that nice red-haired boy in
the Marines - Dick Alleson.' Caroline had carried a torch for
Quin for many years and
everyone had rejoiced when she became so suitably engaged.
She went on counting off
the guests and Quin looked out over the silvered sea. It might not come — the
war — but if it did, there was not one of those gilded youths but would be in
the thick of the slaughter.
'I know what we'll drink,
Aunt Frances!' he said, taking her hands. 'The Veuve Clicquot '29! I've got two
cases of it and I've been saving it for something special.'
Frances stared at him. She
was no connoisseur of wine but she knew how Quin prized his fabulous champagne.
'Are you sure?'
'Why not? Let's make it a
night to remember!'
Frances went to bed a happy
woman, for what could this open-handed gesture mean except that he wished to
honour Verena? But the next morning came the remark she had been dreading.
'If there's a party of
young people, we must ask the students if they'd like to come along.'
Gloom descended on Aunt
Frances. Jewish waitresses, girls who did things in the backs of motor cars, to
mingle with the decently brought up children of her friends.
'They're coming to lunch on
Sunday. Surely that's enough?'
Quin, however, was adamant.
'I can't single Verena out to that degree, Aunt Frances, you must see that.'
But to Frances' great
surprise, Verena entirely agreed with Quin and offered herself to invite the
students.
She was as good as her
word. Arriving at the boathouse while everyone was still at breakfast, she
said: 'There's going to be a dance up at Bowmont for my birthday. Anyone who
wouldn't feel uncomfortable without the proper evening clothes would be
entirely welcome.'
By the time Quin appeared
to begin the morning's work, she was able to tell him with perfect truth that
the students had refused to a man.
'But why? Why won't you
come? Everyone is invited - all the students go to Sunday lunch at Bowmont.
It's a ritual.'
'Well, it'll be just as
much of a ritual without me. I'm waiting for a message from Heini and - '
'Not on a Sunday. The post
office is shut.'
The other students joined
in, even Dr Elke - but Ruth was adamant. She didn't feel like a big lunch, she
was going for a walk; she thought the weather might be breaking.
'Then I'll stay with you,'
said Pilly, but this Ruth would not hear of and Pilly was not too hard to
persuade, for the thought of sitting in a well-upholstered chair and eating a
substantial Sunday lunch was very attractive.
It was very quiet when the
others had gone. For a while, Ruth wandered along the shore, watching the seals
out in the bay. Then suddenly she turned inland, taking not the steep cliff
path that led up to the terrace, but the lane that meandered between copses of
hazel and alder, to join, at last, the drive behind the house.
She had been along here
before on the way to the farm and now she savoured again the rich, moist smells
as the earth took over from the sea. She could still hear the ocean, but here
in the shelter were hedgerows tangled with rosehips and wild clematis; sloes
hung from the bushes; and the crimson berries of whitebeam glinted among the trees.
After a while the lane
looped back, passing between open farmland where freshly laundered sheep grazed
in the meadows and she leant over the fence to speak to them,' but these were
not melancholy captives in basements, but free spirits who only looked up
briefly before they resumed their munching.
She was close to the house
now, but hidden from it by a coppice of larches. If she turned into the drive
she would reach the lawns and the shrubberies on the landward side. The
students had been told they could go where they wanted, and Ruth, who could not
face Verena lording it over Quin's dining table, still found that she was
curious about his home. Crossing the bridge over the ha-ha, she came to a
lichen-covered wall running beside a gravel path - and in it, a faded blue door
framed in the branches of a guelder-rose. For a moment, she hesitated - but the
grounds were deserted, no sound came to break the Sunday silence - and boldly
she pushed open the door and went inside.
'I expect it's the dietary
laws,' said Verena reassuringly to Aunt Frances. 'She is a Jew, you know, from
Vienna. Perhaps she expects that we shall be eating pork!' And she laughed
merrily at the oddness of foreigners.
Pilly and Sam, sipping
sherry in the drawing room, looked angrily at Verena.
'Ruth doesn't fuss at all
about what she eats, you know that - and anyway she was brought up as a
Catholic.'
But this was not a very
promising defence for no one knew now what excuse to make for Ruth. Aunt
Frances, however, accepted the kosher version of events, remarking that it had
been the same with the cowman Lady Rothley had employed in the dairy. 'We could
have given her something else, I suppose. An omelette. But there is always the
problem of the utensils.'
Lady Plackett was spending
the day with relatives in Cumberland, but Verena had accompanied the
Somervilles to church and heard Quin read the lesson, and now, dressed in a
cashmere twin set and pearls, she set about trying to put her classmates at
ease. She had already prevented Sam and Huw from trying to dispose of their own
coats, explaining that there was a butler there for the purpose and as they
took their places at table, she kept a watchful eye on those who might have
trouble with their knives and forks. Though Bowmont now was run with a minimum
of servants, Verena was aware that the man serving at the sideboard, the maid
with her cap and apron, might overwhelm those from simple homes, and since Dr
Felton was conversing with Miss Somerville, and Dr Elke was giving Quin an
account of a recent journey to Lapland, Verena applied herself to the burden of
making small talk, asking Pilly about the average consumption of aspirin per
head of the population and enquiring whether Janet's father managed his parish
with one curate or two. She also found time to check up on her protege, Kenneth
Easton. There was no question as yet of inviting Kenneth to the Lodge and she
would, for example, have been far from happy to see him tackle an artichoke in
melted buttery but considering his origins in Edgware Green, Kenneth was doing
rather well.
They took coffee in the
drawing room and then Quin rose and offered croquet on the lawn or the use of a
rather bumpy tennis court, and bore Roger and Elke off to billiards in the
library.
'Would anyone like to look
round the house?' asked Miss Somerville.
Several students said they
would, but before the party could set off, Verena said with proper deference:
'Would you like me to show them round, Miss Somerville? I'm sure you
must want to rest.'
For a moment, Frances' eyebrows
drew together in a frown. But she herself had bidden Verena make herself at
home; the girl was only trying to be helpful.
'Very well - only not the
tower, of course.'
Leaving behind a very
disgruntled group of students, she left the room. But she did not go upstairs
to rest. Instead, she went to the lumber room to fetch a bag of bonemeal and
the bulbs that had come the previous day from Marshalls, and made her way to
the garden.
Opening the door in the
high wall, Aunt Frances saw with displeasure that she was not alone.
A girl was standing with
her back to her, one arm raised to a spray of Autumnalis where it
climbed, loaded with blossom, up the southern wall. Moving forward angrily to
remonstrate, Frances found that the girl was not in fact stealing a rose, but
was rather, with some skill, tucking a stray tendril back behind the wire
before burying her nose once more in the fragrance of the voluptuous deep-pink
flowers.
'You're trespassing,' she
said, in no way placated by this appreciation of one of her favourite plants.
The girl spun round,
startled, but not, in Miss Somerville's opinion, suitably cowed. 'I'm sorry.
Professor Somerville said we could go into the grounds, but I can see this
would be different. It's almost like a room, isn't it? - a hortus
conclusus. All it needs is a unicorn.'
'Well, it's not going to
get a unicorn,' said Aunt Frances irritably. 'The sheep are bad enough when
they get in.'
She put down her trug and
glared at the intruder.
'I will go,' promised Ruth.
'Only it's so unbelievable, this garden. The shelter… and the way it's so
contained and so rich… and the roses still going on as though it's summer, and
all those tousled, tangy things. And those silver ones like feathers; I don't
know what they're called.
'Artemesia,' said Aunt
Frances, still scowling.
'It's magic. To have that
and the sea, the two worlds… And your scarf.'
'What on earth are you
talking about?' said Aunt Frances, wondering if the intruder was unhinged, for
she was looking at the scarf round her neck as she had looked at the white
stars of a lingering clematis.
'It's beautiful!' said
Ruth, feeling suddenly remarkably happy. 'I saw it on the hominid in Professor
Somerville's room, but it looks much better on you!'
'Don't be silly, it's just
an old woollen thing. I'm surprised Quin remembered to bring it up.'
But she now had to face the
fact that she was in the presence of the missing student, the one who had
refused to come to lunch. Like many of the girls of her generation,
Frances had spent six months being 'finished' in Florence where she had found
it difficult to distinguish between Titian and Tintoretto and been unpleasantly
affected by the climate. Still, she had retained enough to be aware that the
intruder, in spite of her dark eyes, belonged to the tradition of all those
Primaveras and garlanded goddesses accustomed to frolicking in verdant meadows.
If she had indeed been about to pluck a flower for her hair it would not have
been unreasonable. As a Jewish waitress for whom special food had to be prepared,
however, she was not satisfactory.
'You're the Austrian girl,
then? The one with the dietary problems?'
'I don't think I
have dietary problems,' said Ruth, puzzled. 'Though I'm not very fond of the
insides of stomachs. Tripe is it?'
'Miss Plackett informed us
that you didn't eat pork. It is very foolish to suppose that anyone would make
you eat what you don't want. And anyway you could have had an omelette.'
She knelt down and began to
clear a patch of earth for her bulbs, and Ruth knelt down beside her to help.
'But I like pork very much.
We often had it in Vienna -my mother does it with caraway seeds and redcurrant
jelly; it's one of her best dishes.'
Miss Somerville tugged at a
tuft of couch grass. 'I thought you were a Jewish refugee,' she said, a touch
of weariness in her voice, for she could see again that life was not going to
be simple; that it was the blond cowman all over again.
'Yes, I suppose I am. Well,
I'm five-eights Jewish or perhaps three-quarters - we don't know for certain
because of Esther Olivares who may have been Jewish but may have been Spanish
because she came from Valencia and was always painted in a shawl which could
have been a prayer shawl but it could have been one that she wore to bull
fights. But my mother was a Catholic and we've never been kosher.' She pulled
up a mare's-tail and threw it onto the pile of weeds. 'It's a bit of a muddle,
I'm afraid - the poor rabbi in Belsize Park gets quite cross: all these people
being persecuted who don't even know when Yom Kippur is or how to say kaddish.
He doesn't think we deserve to be persecuted.' She turned to Aunt
Frances: 'Would you like me to stop talking? Because I can. I have to
concentrate, but it's possible.'
Miss Somerville said she
didn't mind one way or another and passed her the bag of bonemeal.
'I just can't believe this
garden! I used to think that when I went to heaven I'd want to find a great
orchestra like you see it from the Grand Circle of a concert hall - all the
russet-coloured violins and the silver flutes and a beautiful lady harpist
plucking the strings. But then when I came here I thought it had to be the sea.
Only now I don't know… there can't be anything better than this garden. Whoever
made it must have been so good!'
'Yes. She was a Quaker.'
'Gardeners are never
wicked, are they?' said Ruth. 'Obstinate and grumpy and wanting to be alone,
but not wicked. Oh, look at that creeper! I've always loved October so much,
haven't you? I can see why it's called the Month of the Angels. Shall I go and
fetch a wheelbarrow?'
'Yes, it's over there
behind the summerhouse. And bring a watering can.'
Ruth disappeared. Minutes
passed; then there was a cry. Displeased, and for a moment fearful, Miss
Somerville rose.
Ruth was kneeling down by a
patch of mauve flowers which had gone wild in the grass behind the shed.
Flowers like slender goblets growing without leaves so that their uncluttered
petals opened to the sky and their golden centres mirrored the sun. She was
kneeling and she was worshipping - and Miss Somerville, made nervous by what
was obviously going to be more emotion, said sharply: 'What's the matter?
They're just autumn crocus. I put some in a few years ago and they've spread.'
'Yes, I know. I know
they're autumn crocus.' She looked up, pushing her hair off her forehead, and
it was as Miss Somerville had feared; there were tears in her eyes. 'We used to
wait for them every year before we left the mountains. There were meadows of
them above the Grundlsee and it meant… the marvellousness of summer but also
that it was time to leave. Things that flower without their leaves… they come
out so pure. I never thought I'd find them here by the sea. Oh, if only Uncle
Mishak was here. If only he could see them.'
She rose, but it was hard
for her to pick up the handle of the barrow, to turn her back on the flowers.
'Who's Uncle Mishak?'
'He's my great-uncle… he
loves gardening. He's managed to make a garden even in Belsize Park and that
isn't easy.'
'No, I imagine not. A
dreadful place.'
'Yes, but it's friendly.
He's cleared quite a patch, and now he's trying to grow vegetables for my
mother… We can't get fertilizer but - '
'Why on earth not? Surely
they sell it there?'
'Yes, but we can't afford
it. Only it doesn't matter - we use washing-up water and things like that. But
oh, if he saw these! They were Marianne's favourite flowers. It was the wild
flowers she loved. She died when I was six but I can remember her standing on
the aim and just looking. Most of us ran about and shrieked about how lovely
they were, but Marianne and Mishak — they just looked.'
'She was his wife?' asked
Aunt Frances, realizing she would be informed whether she wished it or not.
'Yes. He loved her - oh, my
goodness those two! She was very tall and as thin as a rake, with a big nose,
and she had a stammer, but for him she was the whole world. It was very hard
for him to leave Vienna because her grave is there. He's old now, but it
doesn't help.'
'Why should it?' said Miss
Somerville tartly. And in spite of herself: 'How old?'
'Sixty-four,' said Ruth,
and Miss Somerville frowned, for sixty-four is not old to a woman of sixty.
Ruth, working in the
compost, looked up at the formidable lady and made a decision. You had to be
worthy to hear the story of Mishak's romance, but oddly this sharp-tempered
spinster who had left Quin alone was worthy.
'Would you like to hear how
they met - Uncle Mishak and Marianne?'
'I don't mind, I suppose,'
said Aunt Frances, 'as long as you go on with what you're doing.'
'Well, it was like this,'
said Ruth. 'One day, oh, many, many years ago when the Kaiser was still on his
throne, my Uncle Mishak went fishing in the Danube. Only on that particular
day, he didn't catch a fish, he caught a bottle.'
She paused to judge whether
she had been right, whether Miss Somerville was worthy, and she had been.
'Go on then,' said the old
lady.
'It was a lemonade bottle,'
said Ruth, pushing back her hair and getting into her stride. 'And inside it
was a message…'
Late that night, Aunt
Frances stood by her bedroom window and looked out at the sea. It had rained
earlier, raindrops as big as daisies had hung on the trees, but now the sky was
clear again, and the moon was full over the quiet water.
But the beauty of the view
did little for Miss Somerville. She felt unsettled and confused. It was all to
be so simple: Verena Plackett, so obviously suitable, would marry Quin, Bowmont
would be saved and she, as she had intended all along, would move to the Old
Vicarage in Bowmont village and live in peace with Martha and her dogs.
Instead, she found herself
thinking of a woman she had never known, a plain girl standing terrified before
a class of taunting children in an Austrian village years and years ago. 'She
was as thin as a rake,' the girl in the garden had said, 'with a big
nose, and she had a stammer. But for him she was the whole world.’
Frances had been just
twenty years old when she went to the house on the Scottish Border, believing
that she had been chosen freely as a bride. She knew she was plain, but she
thought her figure was good, and she was a Somerville - she believed that that
counted. The house was beautiful, in a fold of the Tweedsmuir Hills. She had
liked the young man; as she dressed for dinner that first night, she imagined
her future: being a bride, a wife, a mother…
It was late when she returned
to her room where Martha waited to help her to bed. She must have left the door
open, for she could hear voices outside in the corridor.
'Good God, Harry, you
aren't really going to marry that anteater?' A young voice, drawling, mocking.
A silly youth, a friend of her fiance's who'd been at dinner.
'You'll have to feed her on
oats - did you see those teeth!' A second voice, another friend.
'She's like a hacksaw;
she'll tear you to pieces!! And then the voice of her young man - her fiance -
joining ; in the fun. 'Don't worry, I've got it all worked out. I'll
go to her room once a month in my fencing kit, that's padding enough. Then as
soon as she's pregnant I'm off to town to get myself a whizzer!'
It was Martha who shut the
door, Martha who helped her to undress. Martha who kept silence when, the next
morning, Frances left the house and said nothing, enduring the anger of her
parents, the puzzlement of the family on the Border. That had been forty years
ago and nothing had happened since. No door had opened for Frances Somerville
as it had opened for that other girl in an Austrian village. No black-suited
figure with a briefcase had stood on the threshold and asked her name.
Irritated, troubled,
Frances turned from the window, and at that moment Martha came in with her
evening cocoa - and the puppy at her heels.
''Now what?' she
said, relieved to have found something to be angry about. 'I thought you were
taking him down to The Black Bull after tea.'
'Mrs Harper sent word she
couldn't have him said Martha. 'Her mother-in-law's coming to live and she
hates dogs.' She looked down at the puppy who was winding himself round Miss
Somerville's legs like a pilgrim reaching Lourdes. 'He's a bit unsettled, not
having beendown with the students today.'
Frances said she could see
that and picked him up. Nothing had improved: not his piebald stomach, not his
conviction that he was deeply loved.
That was what things were
coming to, she thought. Twenty years ago, the wife of a publican would have
been honoured to have a dog from the big house. Any dog. It was all of a piece,
this idiot mongrel… all of a piece with waitresses who wept over the autumn
crocus, with cowmen who sang and Wagner's stepdaughter with her unequal eyes.
Comely slept in her kennel; she would not have dreamt of coming upstairs. And
it wasn't any good rereading Pride and Prejudice yet again. Mr Darcy
might have been disappointed in Elizabeth Bennet in chapter three, but by
chapter six he was praising her fine dark eyes.
'I'll take him down,' said
Martha, reaching for the dog.
'Oh, leave him for a bit,'
said Frances wearily. Still holding the puppy in her arms, she sat down in the
chair beside her bed.
'/ have come to fetch
you,' the little man had said, opening his briefcase, removing his hat…
It began so well, the trip
to the Fames. The weather had been unsettled for the past two days, but now the
sun shone again and as the Peggoty chugged out of Seahouses harbour,
they felt that lift of the heart that comes to everyone who sails over a blue
sea towards islands.
The puppy felt it too, that
was clear. Its rejection by the innkeeper had left it emotionally unscarred and
its position as student mascot was now established. Quin would not allow it in
the dinghy, but the Peggoty was a sturdy fishing boat which he rented
each year and there was a cabin of a sort where the owner stored his lobster
pots and tackle - the dog could be shut in there when they landed.
Dr Felton had stayed behind
to sort out the previous day's samples; Quin was at the wheel, steering for one
of the smaller islands where the warden was waiting to show them the work in
progress. They had missed the spectacular breeding colonies of the spring when
the cliffs were white with nesting guillemots and razorbills and the puffin
burrows honeycombed the turf, but there were other visitors now: the migrant
goldcrests and fieldfares and buntings -and the seals, hundreds of them,
returning to have their pups.
They passed Longstone
lighthouse and the Keeper, digging his vegetable patch, straightened himself to
wave.
'That's where Grace Darling
came from, isn't it?' asked Sam, thinking how like the Victorian heroine in the
paintings Ruth looked with her wind-whipped hair.
Quin nodded. 'The Harcar
rocks are to the south, where the Forfarshire broke up. We'll see them
on the way back.'
'It's amazing that Mrs
Ridley's grandmother knew her, isn't it?' said Ruth. 'Well, the family… someone
in a legend. She said it wasn't the tuberculosis so much that killed her, but
the fuss they made of her afterwards making her a heroine. I wouldn't mind
being a heroine - it wouldn't kill me!'
Quin didn't doubt this.
'How did you meet Mrs Ridley's grandmother?' he asked curiously. 'She usually
keeps herself to herself.'
'I went to fetch some eggs
and we got talking.' They were very close to the shore when it happened. Dr
Elke had gone into the cabin to hand out their belongings, Quin was watching
the point, steering for the jetty on the far side.
And what did happen at
first was simply funny. A large bull seal bobbed up unexpectedly not four feet
from the boat on the island side. A benevolent, comical seal with long grey
whiskers, making himself known.
The puppy had been asleep
on a pile of canvas. Now he woke, lifted his head. The seal sneezed.
The effect was electric.
The puppy let out a sharp bark of excitement and clambered onto the gunwale.
What he was seeing was unheard of… an ancestor? A monster? His barks became
frenzied; he scrabbled with his feet against the wood.
The boat tilted.
It took only a second… one
of those seconds that no one can believe are irreversible.
'He's gone! Oh God, the
puppy's gone!' Quin looked round, assessed the creature's chances. The sea was
calm, but the tide here ran at five knots. To be dashed against the rocks or
swept past them out to sea were the alternatives - yet he began to turn the
boat, heading her into the wind.
No one dreamt that this was
only the beginning. Ruth was impetuous, but she was not mad. Dr Elke was just
emerging from the cabin, she was too far away to see; the others were leaning
over the side, trying to chart the progress of the little dog as he bobbed up,
paddling frantically, and vanished into the trough of a wave. Only when Pilly
began to scream - then they saw. Saw Ruth's bewildered face as the current took
her, saw her head turn… not to search for the dog now… to measure her
terrifying speed.
The next seconds were the
stuff of Quin's nightmare for years to come: those seconds in which he forced
himself to remain where he was till he had turned the boat fully into the wind
and shut down the engine. Not letting himself move till he could rely on the Peggoty
to hold steady.
'Keep her exactly like
this,' he said to Verena. 'Do nothing else,' and she nodded and took
the wheel.
Now there could be speed,
but as he took the rope Elke was holding out to him there were more moments
lost for Sam had climbed onto the gunwale, was taking off his jacket, and Quin
lunged out to pull him back onto the deck with such force that the boy lay
there stunned. And then the rope was round his waist, the knot secure.
'Now let me down,' said
Quin - and at last was in the sea.
The rocks were his only
chance… if she could cling on long enough for him to reach her, but they loomed
out of the water, barnacle encrusted and sheer. He saw her struggling for a
hold… begin to pull herself out… then lose her grip and try to swim back
towards him, but that was hopeless. No one could swim against that tide.
In the Peggoty,
Huw turned his head and retched suddenly, the rope unmoving in his huge hands.
Quin was closer now… close
enough for her to put out an arm to reach him - and then a wave broke over her
head, and she was gone. Twice he found her… and lost her. And then, when hope
was almost gone, he found something that he could grasp and hold and wind round
his hand… Something that did not escape him; her hair.
'No!' said Dr Elke. 'Leave
her. You can talk to her later.'
Quin shook her off.
Refusing to strip his soaking clothes, his teeth chattering, he had waited to
turn the boat and set her on course for the harbour, but he would wait no
longer. His anger was like nothing he had ever known: it came from the gods - a
visitation abolishing cold, propriety, compassion.
Ruth lay where they had
dragged her, naked but for a rough grey blanket, in the stuffy cubby hole
beneath the deck. Her hair was coiled in an unappealing tangle among the
lobster pots; there was a smell of fish, and tar. It was almost dark, but not
so dark that she couldn't see Quin's face.
'Well, I hope you're
satisfied. You're a heroine now, aren't you - you and Grace Darling! You've put
the life of half your friends at risk - that besotted youth who gawps at you
tried to jump in after you, but that doesn't matter, of course. Nothing matters
as long as you can be in the limelight, you attention-seeking spoilt little
brat. Well, let me tell you, Ruth, no will ever take you on any field trip
again, I'll see to that. You're a danger to everyone, you're incapable of the
two things that are needed — unselfishness and common sense. Dear God, Verena
Plackett is worth ten of you. As soon as the doctor's seen you, I'm packing you
off home.'
She had closed her eyes,
but there was no escaping his voice.
'Is he dead?' she managed
to say.
'Who?'
'The puppy.'
'Almost certainly, I should
think. You can be glad he's the only casualty. This isn't some amusing Austrian
lake, you know. This is the North Sea.' And as she turned her head, trying to
hide the tears under her lashes, his rage mounted again. 'Are you even
listening to what I'm saying? Are you capable of understanding just what you've
done?'
Her voice, when it came,
was almost inaudible. 'Could I… please… have a bucket? I'm going to be sick.'
Late that evening there was
a kind of miracle. A message from the coastguard carried to the boathouse to
say that the puppy had been washed onto the shingle further down the island and
was alive. But Ruth was not there to share in the rejoicing.
'We have to tell her,' said
Pilly. 'We have to find some way of getting a message to the house.'
'The Professor will tell
her,' said Dr Elke.
'No, he won't.' Pilly's
round blue eyes were desperate. 'He'll go on punishing her. He hates her.'
Dr Elke was silent.
Existing in extreme content without the company of men, she sometimes saw
further than she wished to.
'No, Pilly,' she said sadly.
'He doesn't hate her. It's not like that.'
Ruth woke, bewildered, from
a drugged sleep. The clock beside the bed said three o'clock - the pre-dawn
hour in which demons gibber and people die. At first she didn't know where she
was… she seemed to be in a large bed covered by some kind of animal skin: the
pelt of a bear or something even more exotic. Then, as she touched it, she
remembered.
She was in Quin's tower. He
had given instructions to have her carried there after the boat landed - still
furious, taking no notice when she said that she was perfectly well, that she
wanted to go back to the boathouse with the others. He'd told the students to
keep away and sent for two men from the farm to carry her.
'No one is to go near her
till she's seen a doctor,' he'd said.
This wasn't help; it wasn't
concern; it was punishment.
The doctor had come
earlier, an old man, sounding her chest, feeling her pulse.
'I'm all right,' she'd kept
saying, and he said, 'Yes, yes,' and left her something in a bottle to make her
sleep.
But she wasn't all right.
Even the news brought in by Martha - that the dog was safe - couldn't make her
all right. It wasn't the waves breaking over her head that had troubled her
half-sleep. It was what Quin had said: his rejection, his cruelty. She was in
disgrace, she was to be sent home.
She got up, her bare feet
feeling the wooden boards. This was the most masculine room she had ever seen;
almost without furniture, the uncurtained windows letting in pools of
moonlight, the bear skin thrown carelessly over the bed with its single pillow.
To sleep thus was to get as close as one could get to sleeping out of doors.
The nightdress she was
wearing must have belonged to Aunt Frances; made of thick white flannel, it
billowed out over her feet; the ruffles on the neck half buried her chin.
Turning on the lamp, she saw, on a small desk pushed against the wall, the
photograph of a young woman whose dark, narrow face above the collar of the
old-fashioned dress was startlingly familiar. Picking it up, she carried it to
the window and examined it.
'What are you doing?'
She turned abruptly, caught
out again, once more in the wrong.
'I'm sorry; I woke.'
Quin's face was still drawn
and closed, but now he made an effort. 'There's nothing wrong with her
physically,' the doctor had said to him, 'but she looks as though she's had
some kind of shock.'
'Well, obviously,' Quin had
replied. 'Nearly drowning would be a shock.'
But old Dr Williams had
looked at him and shaken his head and said he didn't think it was that; she was
young and strong and hadn't been in the water long. 'Go easy,' he'd said,
'treat her gently.'
So he came over, took the
picture from her hand. 'Are you feeling better?'
'Yes, I'm perfectly all
right. I wish I could go.'
'But you can't, my poor
Rapunzel; not till the morning. Even your pretty hair wouldn't be long enough
to pull up a prince to rescue you.'
'And there's a shortage of
princes,' she said, trying to speak lightly for the edge was still there in his
voice.
Quin said nothing. Earlier
he had found Sam on the terrace, looking up at Ruth's window, and sent him
away.
'It's your mother, isn't
it?' she asked, looking down at the portrait.
'Are we so alike?'
'Yes. She looks
intelligent. And so… alive.'
'Yes, she was, I believe.
Until I killed her.'
It was Ruth now who was
angry. 'What rubbish! What absolute poppycock. Schmarrn!' she said,
spitting out the Viennese word, so much more derogatory than anything in
English. 'You talk like a kitchen maid.'
'I beg your pardon?' he
said, startled.
But his attack on the boat
had freed Ruth. Born to please, trained to put herself at the service of others,
she now abandoned the handmaiden role.
'I shouldn't have said
that. Kitchen maids are often highly intelligent, like your Elsie who told me
the names of all the plants on the cliff. But you talk like someone in a
third-rate romantic novel - you killed her, indeed! Well, what does one expect
from a man who sleeps under dead animals… a man who owns the sea!'
She had succeeded better
than she'd hoped in riling him. 'Nobody owns the sea,' he said. 'And if it
interests you, I'm giving away what I do own. The year after next, Bowmont goes
to the National Trust.'
She took a deep breath. She
was, in fact, totally confounded and worse than that, utterly dismayed; she
felt as though she had been kicked in the stomach. .
'All of it?' she stammered.
'The house and the gardens and the farm?'
'Yes.' He had recovered his
equanimity. 'As a good Social Democrat I'm sure you'll be pleased.'
She nodded. 'Yes…' she
struggled to say. 'It's the right thing to do. It's just…'
But what it was was
something she could not put into words. That she was devastated by the loss of
a place which had nothing to do with her, which she would never see again. That
she had been storing Bowmont in her mind: its cliffs and flowers, its scents
and golden strands ..; There would be a lot of waiting in her life with Heini:
sitting in stuffy green-rooms, accompanying him in crowded trains. Like the
coifed girls in medieval cloisters who wove mysterious trees and crystal rivers
into their tapestries, she had spun for herself a dream of Bowmont: of paths
where she could wander, of a faded blue door in a high wall. And the dream
meant Bowmont as it was - as Quin's demesne, as a place where an irascible old
woman bullied the flowers out of the ground.
'Is it because you will
benefit the people?' she asked, sounding priggish but not knowing how to say it
otherwise.
Quin shrugged. 'I doubt if
the people - whoever they are
- are all that interested
in Bowmont; the house is nothing much. What they want, I imagine, is access to
the sea and that could be arranged with a few more rights of way. I'm afraid I
don't share your passion for "the people" in the abstract. One never
knows quite who they are.'
'Well, why then?'
Quin took the portrait of
his mother from her hands. 'You chose to sneer when I said I killed her. Yet it
is not untrue. My father knew that she was not supposed to have children. She'd
been very ill - they met in Switzerland when he was there in the Diplomatic
Service. She was in a sanatorium, recovering from TB. He wanted a child because
of Bowmont. He wanted an heir and he didn't mind what it cost. An heir for
Bowmont.'
'And if he did?' Ruth
shrugged. She seemed to him relentless, suddenly; grown up, no longer his
student, his protegee. 'Men have always wanted that. A tobacconist will want an
heir for his kiosk… the poorest rabbi wants a son to say kaddish for him when
he's dead. Why do you make such a thing of it?'
'If a man forces a woman to
bear a child… if he risks her life so that he can come to his own father - the
father he quarrelled with and loathed - and say: "Here is an heir"
-then he is committing a sin.'
But she wouldn't heed him.
'And what of her? Do you think she was so feeble? Do you think she didn't want
it? She was brave - look at her face. She wanted a child. Not for Bowmont, not
for your father. She wanted one because a child is a marvellous thing to have.
Why do you patronize women so? Why can't they risk their lives as men do? They
have a right, as much as any man.'
'To jump into the sea for a
half-grown mongrel?' he jeered.
'Yes. For anything they
choose.' But she bent her head, for she knew she had risked not only her own
life, but his and perhaps Sam's - that his cruelty down there on the boat had
had a cause. 'I'm a mongrel too,' she said very quietly. 'And anyway your aunt
loves it.'
'Loves the puppy? Are you mad}
She's done nothing but try to give it away.'
Again that shrug, so
characteristic of the Viennese. 'My father always says, "Don't look at
what people say look at what they do." Why did your aunt
choose the carpenter -everyone knew his wife had asthma and she wasn't allowed
to have pets? Why the publican when his mother was attacked by an Alsatian when
she was little and she was terrified of dogs?'
'How do you know all this?'
he said irritably. How did she know, in a week at Bowmont, that Elsie was
interested in herbalism, that Mrs Ridley's grandmother knew the Darlings? It
was infuriating, this foible of hers: this embarrassing ability to go in deep.
Whoever married her would be driven mad by it. Heini would be driven mad by it.
'Anyway, my father never recovered. He carried the guilt and wretchedness for
the rest of his life. It probably killed him too - he volunteered in 1916 when
there was no need to do so.'
'There you go again. The
English are so melodramatic! A bullet killed him.'
'What's the matter with
you?' asked Quin, not accustomed to being deflated by a girl whose emotionalism
was a byword. And amazed by what he was about to do, he went over to the desk,
unlocked a drawer, and took out a faded exercise book with a blue marbled
cover.
'Read it,' he said. 'It's
my father's diary.'
The book fell open at the
page he had read a hundred times and not shown to a living soul, and Ruth took
it and moved closer to the lamp.
‘I came back from Claire's
funeral, she read, and Marie brought me the baby, as though the sight of it
could console me, that puce, wrinkled creature with its insatiable greed for
life. The baby killed her - no, I killed her. I was cleverer than the
doctors who told me she musn't bear a child. I knew better, I wanted a son. I
wanted to bring the boy back to Bowmont and show my father that I had produced
an heir - that he need despise me no longer. Yes, I who hated him, who fled
Bowmont and turned my back on the iniquities of inheritance and wealth, was as
tainted as he was by the desire for power. Claire wanted a baby;
I try not to forget that,
but it was my job to be wiser than she.
Now I have to try and love
the child; he is not to blame, but I have no desire to live without her and no
love left to give. If I have a wish it is that he at least will relinquish his
inheritance and go forth as a free man among his equals.
Ruth shut the diary. 'Poor
man,' she said quietly. 'But why do you embalm him? You should grow radishes,
like Mishak.'
'What?' For a moment he
wondered whether her brain had been affected by the accident.
'Marianne didn't like
radishes. His wife. He never grew them when she was alive. When she died, he
said, "Now I must grow radishes or she will remain under the ground."
He meant that the dead must be allowed to move about freely inside us, they
musn't be encapsulated, made finite by their prejudices.' She paused, moving
her hair out of her eyes in a gesture with which he was utterly familiar. 'He
grows a lot of radishes and I don't like them very much as it happens, but I
eat them. All of us eat them.' She paused. 'Perhaps it's right to give Bowmont
away; I don't know about that, and it's none of my business - but surely it
must be because you want to, not because of what you think he might have
wanted? He would have grown and changed and seen things differently perhaps.
Look how you hated me this afternoon - but you have not always done so and
perhaps one day you will do so no longer.'
Quin looked at her, started
to speak. Then he took the diary and locked it up again in the bureau. 'Come,'
he said, 'I think it's time you met the Basher.'
He took his old tweed
jacket off the peg behind the door and put it round her shoulders. As he led
her downstairs, he made no attempt to be unheard, switching on lights as he
came to them, walking with a firm tread. He knew exactly what he would do if
they were discovered and that it would cause him no moment of unease.
They made their way down
the corridor that connected the tower with the body of the house and as he
steered her, one hand on her back, through the rooms, she touched, here and
there, the black shabby leather chair, the surface of a worn, much-polished
table, learning Quin's house, and liking what she learnt. Inside the fortress
was an unpretentious home, and the hallmark of the woman who had been its
curator was everywhere. Aunt Frances, who had left Quin alone, had left his
house alone also. There was none of the forbidding grandeur Ruth had imagined;
only a place waiting quietly for those who wished to come.
But this was a journey with
a particular end," and by the far wall of the library, Quin stopped. In
Aunt Frances' flannel nightgown, Quin's jacket hanging loose from her
shoulders, Ruth stared at the portrait of Rear Admiral Quin-ton Henry Somerville
in his heavy golden frame.
The Basher had been seventy
when the portrait was commissioned by his parishioners and the artist, a local
worthy, had clearly done his best to flatter his sitter, but his success had
been moderate. The Basher's cheeks, for which a great deal of rose madder had
been required, showed the broken veins caused by the whisky and the weather;
his short, surprisingly snub nose was touched at the tip with purple. In spite
of his grand dress uniform and the bull neck rising from its braided collar,
Quin's grandfather, with his small mouth, bald pate and obstinate blue eyes,
resembled nothing so much as an ill-tempered baby.
'And yet,' said Ruth,
'there is something …' 'There's something all right. Pig-headedness,
ferocity… in the navy he bullied his officers; he thought flogging was good for
the ratings. He married for money - a: lot of money - and treated his wife
abominably. And when he died, every single soul in North Northumberland came to
the funeral and shook their heads and said that the good times were past and
England would never be the same again.' ' 'Yes, I can see that it
might be so.' 'He despised my father because he liked poetry - because he liked
to be with his mother in the garden. He was terrified that he'd bred a coward.
Cowardice frightened him; it was the only thing that did - to have a son who
was a weakling. My father was wretched at school - he went when he was seven
and he cried himself to sleep every night for years. He hated sailing, hated
the sea. He was a gentle soul and the Basher despised him from the bottom of
his heart. He was determined that my father should go into the navy, but my
father wouldn't. He stood up to him over that. Then at fifteen he ran away to
one of his mother's relatives. She took him abroad and he joined the Diplomatic
Service and did very well - but he never went back to Bowmont. He loathed
everything it stood for - power, privilege, Philistinism - the contempt for the
things he valued. Yet you see when it came to the point, he risked my mother's
life so that it could all go on.'
Ruth was silent, looking at
the portrait, wondering why this ferocious Englishman should have a nose like
Beethoven's, wondering why she did not dislike that hard old face.
'But you liked him?'
'No.' Quin hesitated. 'I was eight when I came to Bowmont. I'd heard only
awful stories about him and he was all that I had heard. He put me into the
tower to sleep under the bear he'd shot, teeth and all. I was there alone, a
child with a father blown to pieces in the war. I was terrified of the dark -
I'd come straight from Switzerland and heard the servants talk about my
mother's death - the screams, the blood when I was born. Going to bed was
purgatory. I liked the tower but I wanted a night light -I begged for one, but
he said no. I wasn't afraid of anything out of doors… climbing, sailing… I
loved the sea as he did. He saw that, but he was obstinate. One day I said:
"If I sail alone to Harcar Rock and back, can I have a night light?"
He said: "If you sail alone to Harcar Rock, I'll beat you within an inch
of your life." He used to talk like that, like a boy's adventure story.'
'Harcar?' That's where the Forfarshire
went down? Where Grace Darling rowed to?'
'Yes. Anyway, I did it. I
got the dinghy out at dawn - I was small but I was strong; sailing's a knack,
nothing more. Even so, I don't know why I wasn't killed; the currents are
terrible there. When I came back he was standing on the shore. He didn't say
anything. He just frogmarched me up to the house and beat me so hard that I
couldn't sit down for a week. But that night when I went to bed, there it was -
my night light.'
'Yes,' said Ruth, after a
pause. 'I see.'
'I could do it, Ruth. It's
no trouble to me to be Master of Bowmont. Physical things don't bother me. I
can find a wife -' He checked himself, 'a new wife - I can breed sons. But I
don't forget what it did to my father. I don't forget that my mother died for
his dynastic pride. So let someone else have it. I shall be off on my travels
again soon in any case. Unless -' But there was no need to speak to her of the
war he was sure would come.
Back in the tower, he took
the jacket from her shoulders, turned back the covers.
'Tomorrow you shall go back
to your friends, Rapunzel,' he said. 'Now get some sleep.'
The sudden gentleness
almost overset her.
'Can I stay, then?' she
managed to say.
'Yes, you can stay.'
'Oh, my dear!'
said Lady Plackett as her daughter turned from the mirror on the evening of the
dance. 'He will be overcome!' - and Verena smiled for she could not
help thinking that her mother spoke the truth.
Miss Somerville's letter
suggesting a party for her birthday had sent Verena to Fortnum's in search of a
suitable dress, where their chief vendeuse had suggested a simple
Greek tunic of white georgette for, as she pointed out, Verena's beauty was in
the classical style.
Verena had refused. She
wanted, on the night that she hoped would seal her fate, to be thoroughly and
unexpectedly feminine and ignoring the ill-concealed disapproval of the
saleswoman, she had decided on a gown of strawberry-pink taffeta with a tiered
skirt, each tier edged with a double layer of ruffles. The big leg-o'-mutton
sleeves too were lined with ruffles, as was the heart-shaped neckline, and
wishing to emphasize the youthful freshness which (she was aware) her high
intelligence sometimes concealed, she wore a wreath of rosebuds in her hair.
Had this been the informal
dance originally planned, her toilette might have been too sumptuous, but the
party, as the Placketts hoped, had snowballed to the point where the word
'informal' hardly applied. As Verena stepped into her satin sandal - carefully
low-heeled since Quin, now past his thirty-first birthday, could not really be
expected to grow any more - other girls all over Northumberland were bathing,
young men were tying their black ties or putting on dress uniforms, ready to
make their way to Bowmont. For after all, it had always been rather special,
this sea-girt tower with its absent owner, its fierce chatelaine - and perhaps
they knew what Quin knew; that Fate was knocking on the door and pleasure, now,
a kind of duty.
Ann Rothley and Helen
Stanton-Derby had come over early to help Frances. Helen had brought armfuls of
bronze and gold chrysanthemums, of rosehips and traveller's joy, and
disappeared with rolls of chicken wire to transform the drawing room into a
glowing autumnal bower while Ann had slipped upstairs to supervise Frances'
toilette. Had Miss Somerville worn anything other than her black chenille and
oriental shawl, the County would have been seriously upset, but Ann could
sometimes succeed where Martha failed in coaxing her friend's hair into a less
rigorous style and persuading her that a dab of snow-white powder in the middle
of her nose did not constitute suitable make-up.
Now the three women sat in
the hall, drinking a well-earned glass of sherry before the arrival of the
guests.
'Doesn't everything look
lovely!' said Ann. 'You can just see the place preening itself! You'll see,
it's going to be a tremendous success.'
'I hope so.' Frances was
looking tired.
'And Verena being such a
heroine, too!' said Helen, a little blood-stained round the fingers from the
chicken wire. 'We're all so impressed.'
For Verena's version of
what had happened on the Fames had gained general currency. Everyone knew that
a foreign girl had lost her head and jumped into the sea, putting everyone's
life into jeopardy, that Quin had been furious, and that Verena, by keeping
calm and holding the boat steady, had been able to avert a tragedy.
'I'm not quite sure why the
girl jumped in the first place?' asked Helen. 'Someone said it was to save that
mongrel puppy of yours, but that can't be right surely?'
'Yes, that seems to have
been the reason,' said Frances.
Though they could see that
Frances didn't really want to discuss the accident, her friends' curiosity was
thoroughly aroused.
'It seems such an
extraordinary thing to do,' said Ann. 'And for a foreigner! I thought they
didn't like animals. Though I must say the cowman was the same - when a calf
died you had to drag him away or he'd have spent all night weeping over the
cow.'
'How is he getting on?'
'He's gone down to London -
they've taken him on in the chorus at Covent Garden and the dairymaid's
distraught! Silly creature - he never gave her the least encouragement.' But
the change of subject had not, as Frances hoped, diverted her. 'What's she
like, this girl? The one who jumped?'
'She's blonde too,' said
Frances wearily.
Helen Stanton-Derby sighed.
'Well, it's all very unsatisfactory,' she said. 'Let's just hope something can
be done about Hitler before the place is flooded out.' ;
But Ann now was looking
upwards - and there stood Verena ready to descend!
Just for a moment, the
faces of all three ladies showed the same flicker of unease - a flicker which
was almost at once extinguished. It was touching that Verena had taken so much
trouble, and in the softer light of the drawing room or beneath the Chinese
lanterns on the terrace, the colour of the dress would be toned down. And
anyway, it wasn't what they thought of her dress that mattered - it was how-she
looked to Quin.
They turned their heads and
relief coursed through them. Quin had entered the hall and moved over to the
staircase. He meant to welcome her, to tell her how nice she looked.
And up to a point, this was
true. Reminded of Verena's unfortunate tumble on the night she came, touched by
his aunt's mysterious but undoubted affection for the Placketts he smiled at
the birthday girl and though Lady Plackett was standing by to pay the necessary
compliments, it was he who said: 'You look charming, Verena. Without doubt,
you'll be the belle of the ball.'
As he led her through to
the drawing room, a distant telephone began to ring.
Down on the beach, Ruth was
gathering driftwood. It was a job she loved; a kind of useful beachcombing. The
puppy was with her; 'helping', but cured of the sea. When she went too near the
water, he dropped the sticks he had been corralling, and sat on his haunches
and howled.
'It's going to be a lovely
bonfire; the best ever,' said Pilly, and Ruth nodded, wrinkling her nose with
delight at the smell of wood smoke and tar and seaweed, and that other smell…
the tangy, mysterious smell that might be ozone but might just be the sea
itself. The happiness that Quin had shattered on the boat had returned. She
felt that she wanted to stay here for ever, living and learning with her
friends.
Looking up, she saw a man
come down the cliff path and go into the boathouse, and presently Dr Felton
came out and made his way towards them.
'Your mother telephoned,
Ruth. She wants you to ring her back at once. She's waiting by the phone.' And
seeing her face: 'I'm sure it's nothing to worry about. I expect Heini's come
early.'
'Yes.' But Ruth's face was
drained of all colour. No one telephoned lightly at Number 27. The phone was in
the hall, overheard, rickety. The coins collected for it always came out of a
jam jar as important as hers for Heini, one spoke over a buzz of interference.
Her mother would not have phoned without a strong reason when she was due home
so soon in any case. It could, of course, be marvellous news… Heini on an
earlier plane… it could be that.
'I'll come with you,' said
Pilly.
'No, Pilly, I'd rather go
alone. You keep the dog.'
The servant was waiting,
ready to escort her.
'If you come with me, miss.
I'll take you to Mr Turton. There's a bit of a row going on at the house with
the guests arriving, but Mr Turton's got a phone in his pantry. You'll be
private there.'
'Yes,' said Ruth. 'Thank
you.' And swallowed hard because her mouth was very dry, and dredged up a
smile, and followed him up the path towards the house.
She had managed the
bonfire; she had said nothing to the others. She had joined in the singing and
helped with the clearing up. But now, lying beside Pilly in the dormitory, she
knew she could endure it no longer, being here in this untouched place which
washed one clear of anguish, which deceived one into thinking that the world
was beautiful.
She had to get back; she
had to get back at once. Three more days here were unendurable now that she
knew what she knew - and her mother's incoherent voice, scarcely audible, came
back to her yet again - her desperate efforts to tell all she had to tell
against the interruptions and the noise.
It was well past midnight;
everyone was asleep. Ruth rose, dressed, scribbled a note by torchlight. She
would take only the small canvas bag she used on her collecting trips - Pilly
would bring the rest. She'd get a lift to Alnwick and wait for the milk train
which connected with the express at Newcastle. It didn't really matter how long
she took, only that she was on her way. Every half-hour she spent here was a
betrayal.
She crept down the ladder,
let herself out. The beauty of the moonlit sea, even in her wretchedness, took
her breath away, but she would not let herself be seduced again, not ever - and
she began to walk quickly up the lane between the alders and the hazel bushes.
Then, as she came up behind
the house, she heard music. Cole Porter's "Night and Day", a
wonderful tune, dreamy… and saw light streaming out onto the terrace.
Of course. Verena's dance.
She had entirely forgotten -inhabiting, since her mother's phone call, a
different world. As she crossed the gravel, meaning to take a "short cut
to the road, she saw that the drive was full of cars: two-seaters mostly, the
colour bleached out of them by moonlight; but the shape - predatory, privileged
- perfectly clear. Cars for laughing young men with scarves blowing behind
them, young men with goggles and one arm round their giggling girls, driving
too fast.
There had been a shower
earlier. As she made her way across the lawn, her shoes were soaked. The
Chinese lanterns swayed in the breeze, but the long windows were uncurtained
and open at the top. She could see as clearly as on a stage the couples
revolving. The melody had changed; it was a tango now. She knew the words: It
was all 'cos of my jealousy. Some of the guests were dancing cheek to
cheek, most were hamming it up, because it was impossible for the British to
take anything seriously; certainly not jealousy, certainly not love.
The room, now that the
double doors were open, seemed vast; the banks of flowers, the silver champagne
buckets belied the informality of Verena's dance. A few older women sat round
the edge, watching the girls in their perms and pastels, the arrogant young
men.
And how arrogant they were;
how they brayed and shrieked as the music stopped, tossing their heads, pulling
their girls to the array of glasses, pouring out more drinks. How they laughed,
and slapped each other on the back, while in Vienna people were being piled
into cattle trucks and taken to the East, and Heini -
But her mind drew back. It
would not follow Heini.
Now she could see Quin. He
had come into the room and he was carrying something in a tall glass - carrying
it to Verena, to where she sat in a high-backed chair. He didn't look like the
braying young men, even in her anger she had to admit that. He looked older and
more intelligent, but he was part of all this. He belonged.
Verena was simpering and he
bent his head attentively, squiring her, while the dowagers smirked and nodded.
It seemed to be true, what everyone said - that he would marry Verena. She was
pointing to something on the floor and he bent to pick it up and handed it to
her, gallantly, with a bow. A rose from her extraordinary headdress! Quin as a Rosenkaval-ier
- that was rich! A man who'd rushed out of the Stadtpark as though the music of
her city was a plague…
And as if they read her
thoughts, the three serious dark-suited men on the dais launched into a waltz!
Not Strauss, but Lanner whom she loved as much. She knew it well, she had
danced to it with Heini in the Vienna Woods.
'Oh no! Not that old
stuff.' She could hear the braying, blond young man with the slicked-back hair.
'Give us something decent!' A second youth, almost identical, staggered up to
the band, shaking his head.
But the band went doggedly
on: playing not well, perhaps, but carefully, and the young men gave in and
pulled the girls out and began to lurch about, parodying the sweetness of the
waltz, exaggerating the steps. Most of them were drunk now, they enjoyed
colliding with each other, enjoyed deriding the music of another land. Now one
of them stumbled and almost fell - a tall youth with black curls and that was really
funny. His partner tried to pull him up and then a red-haired boy with freckles
flicked champagne into his face. It was all so hilarious. All such a scream…
The stone was in her hand
before she knew that she had picked it up. She must have seen it earlier, for
it was the right size, heavy enough to make an impact, small enough for her to
propel it with force. The act of throwing it was wonderful: a catharsis - and
the crash of the splintered glass. It seemed that she waited for seconds,
minutes almost, yet it was not so, for by the time Quin came out on to the
terrace, followed by an excited, angry group of revellers, she was already
running back out of the light, across the grass… was down in the lane which
would lead her to the road.
'There she is!'
'It's a girl! Come on,
let's get her!'
Then Quin's voice, quiet,
yet a whiplash. -No. You will all go back inside. I know the girl, she comes
from the village and I will deal with her.'
They obeyed him. He had
seen where she went, but there was a danger she would turn from the lane into
the copse for shelter, and though he knew she could not escape, for the wood
ended in a high fence and a stream, there were sometimes gin traps there, set
by poachers. Even so, he schooled himself not to run till he was out of sight
of the house.
He caught up with her
easily. She had done exactly as he had expected.
'Wait!' he shouted. 'There
may be traps! Take care!' He spoke in German, using all the means to calm her,
approaching slowly. 'Don't move.'
But she had already
stopped. When he came up to her she was leaning against a spruce sapling, her
posture, in the fleeting moonlight, that of a young St Sebastian waiting for
arrows.
His words, when they came,
punctured her martyred pose in an instant.
'I don't like bad manners,'
said Quin quietly. 'These people are my guests.'
Her head went up. 'Yes. The
kind of guests one would expect you to have - a man who owns the sea. Braying,
mindless idiots who mock at music. Don't they know what is going on? Can't they
even read? Have they seen the papers? No, of course they only read the sporting
pages; which horse has gone faster than another and the report of who curtseyed
to the King in a headdress of dead ostriches.' She was shaking so much that her
words came in bursts between the chattering of her teeth. 'Today… now… while
they get drunk and scream in their ridiculous clothes, my people are gathered
up and put into cattle trucks and sent away. While they pour wine onto the
floor and fall over, young boys who believed in the brotherhood of man are
beaten senseless in the street.'
Quin made no move to
comfort her. He was as angry as she was, but his voice was entirely controlled.
'I will not point out to you that your people - using the word in a different
sense - stood in the Heldenplatz and yelled in their thousands for Hitler. But
I will tell you this. In mocking at the people you saw here, you commit more
than ill manners; you commit an injustice over which you will burn with shame -
and very soon. For it is these braying boys who the moment war comes will flock
to fight. It is they who will confront the evil that is Hitler even though they
do it for a jape and a lark. The boy who drank too much and fell over has just
passed out of Sandhurst. He's Ann Rothley's only son and if war breaks out I
wouldn't give him six months. His friend - the one who poured champagne over
him - is a lieutenant in the Marines. He's engaged to that girl in the blue
dress and they've put their wedding forward because he's being posted overseas.
The Bainbridge twins - the ones who don't like waltzes - are in the air force.
Both of them. I suppose they might last a year because they're excellent
pilots, but I doubt it. You will be able to look into that room this year or
next year or the year after and see a roomful of ghosts - of dead men and
weeping women. While your Heini, I wouldn't be surprised, will still be playing
his arpeggios.'
'No!' Her voice was
scarcely audible. She could not turn from the shelter of the tree. 'I had a phone
call this evening. They've caught him. Heini is in a camp.'
'I can't,' said Heini in a
choking voice. 'I can't do it.'
The red face of the camp
commandant with its brutal jaw, its small blue eyes, thrust itself into
Heini's.
'Oh, I think you can. I
think you'll find you can.' Heini saw the flash of the knife in the
commandant's hand, and realized that he was defeated. There was not even a
potato peeler - he was expected to peel three buckets of potatoes under a cold
water tap. He had explained that he was a pianist, that his hands were not like
other people's, that they were his livelihood, and no one had listened, no one
cared. One slip of the blade and he would not be able to practise, perhaps for
weeks.
Beside him, Meierwitz had
already started, neatly slicing off the discoloured eyes, dropping the naked
potatoes into the water. But Meierwitz was different, he came from a
working-class district in the Ruhr; Meierwitz was used to hardship; he whistled
as he worked, he pointed out a robin on the fence post, watching them.
For Heini, the grey fields,
the grey sky, the murmur of the sea on the shingle beach a mile away, were a
featureless, nightmare world. The somnolent black and white cows grazing behind
the barbed-wire perimeter of the camp might have been creatures from Hades. It
was his third day in captivity and already he knew that he would crack up under
the strain. The men slept six to a hut, they rose at seven to do PE in the
freezing cold, breakfast was porridge which he had read about and never seen,
and bread and dripping - and always tea, tea, tea - never once a cup of coffee.
Then came these frightful chores - potato peeling, vegetable slicing, any of
which could damage his hands, and in the evening the raucous noise of mouth
organs or the wireless or people playing poker for matchsticks. And now
lectures were being organized, compulsory ones, and the previous night there
had been a film show where a mindless comic had run about playing the ukelele
and losing his trousers. If this was what passed for culture among the British,
he was going to be very unhappy here.
Meierwitz had chopped off a
piece of potato and thrown it at the robin who considered it, his head on one
side, and decided it was unworthy as an offering, and the brutal commandant, an
ironmonger from Graz who was determined to lick this miscellaneous gaggle of
refugees into a worthy task force, came by and told him not to bother. 'He only
eats worms,' he said, already rather proud of the picky attitude of this most
British of birds, and threw a contemptuous glance at Heini Radek. You'd think
he'd be glad to get out of Europe instead of whinging on about his hands.
For Heini, the discovery
that his visa was a forgery had come out of the blue. The hours spent in the
immigration huts at the airport were a nightmare that he would remember to his
dying day. Along with the others whose papers were not in order or those who
had come over on block visas, he'd been taken to this transit camp and treated
- he considered - like an animal; herded, rubber-stamped, pushed about. At
first he had thought he might be sent back but public opinion in Britain had at
last woken up to the plight of the refugees and after the first day, everyone
at Dovercamp had learnt that they could remain. Those who volunteered for
agricultural work or were willing to join the Pioneer Corps could be released
quickly; the rest had to be processed, sorted, above all a sponsor had to be
found to guarantee that they would not become a burden on the taxpayer.
The euphoria this had
produced in the other inmates had passed Heini by. There was certainly no
question of his volunteering for agricultural work or becoming a Pioneer. No
one seemed to understand that music wasn't some selfish pursuit; it was his
mission. The volunteer ladies who took down his particulars in appallingly slow
handwriting seemed to find this impossible to grasp. One had spelled
"Conservatoire" as "conservatory" and thought he was a
horticulturist, and another had said that there seemed to be an awful lot of
music "over there". It was two days before he had been allowed to phone
Frau Berger, but the line was so bad that he could hardly hear her and it was
difficult to remember that this family, who had once been able to open doors to
every chancellory in Vienna, were now as penniless and stateless as he was
himself. The Bergers could not guarantee him financially; their name, with the
bullying ladies in the office, carried no weight. Yet they would find someone
to sponsor him; they would help him. And Ruth would come. All his hope centered
on her as he plunged his hands into the bucket and took out another spud.
More persecution followed
in the long day. The commandant had decided to dig a vegetable patch on the
perimeter of the camp and all the able-bodied men were marshalled to dig. The
soggy earth, the blunt and heavy spade, made the task appallingly heavy and he
could actually feel the callouses come up on his palms. Yet when he gave up
after half an hour, there were nudges and glances and someone pointed out that
if Professor Lipchitz, an elderly musicologist from Dresden, could work in the
fields, then so could he.
It was as they sat drinking
tea from enamel mugs and eating the dry biscuits they were issued in the
afternoon, that a boy from the office poked his head round the door of the hut.
'Mr Radek?' he called.
Heini rose, his heart
pounding.
'There's someone to see you
in the office.'
'Who… ?' stammered Heini.
'A girl,' said the
messenger. 'A stunner,' and looked with new respect at Heini.
Ruth stood quietly, waiting
for him to come. She had travelled since the previous night and had scarcely
eaten, but she needed nothing, transfigured as she was by joy.
All the way down from
Northumberland, in terror and despair, she had prayed, dedicating her life
afresh to Heini, offering everything that she held dear if only he was safe.
And then the thing had happened
that never happened: the second chance. Leonie explaining that Heini was here,
that she had misheard, that the camp was in England and she could go to him.
Then Heini entered and she
could not speak for this was not the Wunderkind she had known, this was
a frightened, shabby boy with stubble on his chin and a beaten look in his eyes
- and overwhelmed by love and pity, she opened her arms and made the gesture
that had always spelled sanctuary for him, shaking forward her hair so that it
sheltered them both.
'Thank God, Ruth! I thought
you'd never come.'
'Oh, darling; you're really
here. It's you.' Her voice broke 'I thought you were in a proper camp, you see.
I thought they'd got you.'
'This is a proper camp.
It's awful, Ruth.'
'Yes… yes… but you see I thought
you were in Dachau or Oranienburg. My mother phoned and I couldn't hear her
properly. Then when I learnt you were safe… I'll never forget it as long as I
live.'
And she would never forget
what she had vowed: to serve Heini for all her days and expiate for ever that
time of betrayal she had spent Lotus-eating by the sea.
'You're going to take me
home, aren't you, darling? Now?'
'Heini, I can't this
minute. I have to get hold of Dr Friedlander - I'm sure he'll sponsor you, but
he's away for the weekend. I'll be on his doorstep first thing tomorrow and
then it'll just be a very few days.'
'A few days!' Heini lifted
his head. 'Ruth, I can't stay here that long. I can't!'
'Oh, please, darling! We'll
all be working for you - and they're friendly here, aren't they? I spoke to the
secretary.'
'Friendly!' But there was
such comfort in her presence that he decided to be brave and managing to change
the subject, he said: 'Did you get a piano?'
'Yes. A Bosendorfer!'
'A grand?'
'No, love; we've only got a
very small sitting room. But it's a beauty!'
He was disappointed, but he
would not reproach her. She was his lifeline; his saviour.
They were still clasped in
each other's arms when the secretary returned.
'It's time for your bus,
dear,' she said. 'You mustn't miss it: it's the last one.'
It was as Ruth picked up
her cloak that she saw a bird, untroubled by barbed wire, sitting on a fence
post outside the window.
'Oh, look Heini! It's a
starling! That's an omen for us, isn't it? It must mean good luck.'
She drew him to the window.
The bird cocked its head, bright-eyed, but not looking quite right at the
nether end.
'He's lost some tail
feathers,' said the secretary. 'Been overdoing it.'
'Yes.' Ruth could see that,
but it was of no consequence. An omen was an omen. Tail feathers did not come
into a thing like that.
At the beginning of
December, Leonie decided to celebrate Hanukkah, the Jewish Festival of Light.
One way or another, she
felt that light would be a good idea. Kurt was still in Manchester and she
missed him; the news from Europe grew increasingly grim and the weather -foggy
and dank and not at all like the crisp, snowy weather she remembered in Vienna,
did little to lift the spirits.
There was also the problem
of Heini. Heini had been sleeping on the sofa for a month and practising for
eight hours a day in her sitting room, and though Leonie accepted the need for
this, she found herself wondering, as she crept round him with her duster,
about the friends and relatives of earlier piano virtuosos. Was there,
somewhere in an attic in Budapest, an old lady whose mother had run screaming
into the street to escape yet another of Liszt's brilliant arpeggios? Did the
sale of cotton ear plugs soar in some French pharmacy as the inhabitants of the
rue de Rivoli adjusted to Chopin's practice hours? What did those Viennese
landladies really feel when Beethoven left another piano for dead?
There was also the question
of food. Heini had brought some money from Hungary, but he needed it to insure
his hands; she saw that, and the rest went on fares as he sought out agents and
impresarios who could help him.
'It's for Ruth,' Heini
would say with his sweet smile. 'Everything I do is for Ruth.'
Everyone accepted this;
Heini had declared his intention of marrying Ruth as soon as he was established
and keeping her in comfort, so there could be no question of criticizing anything
he did. If he stayed an hour in the bathroom it was because he had to look nice
at interviews; if he left his clothes on the floor for Leonie to pick up it was
because he was working so hard at his music that there was no time for anything
else, and without complaint the inhabitants of Number 27 adapted to his
presence.
Mishak was not musical.
Silence was his metier; he navigated through the day by gentle sounds: a thrush
outside the window, the fall of rain, the whirr of a lawnmower. Now, as Heini
pounded his piano, he was cut off from all these. He got up even earlier and
worked in the garden till Heini rose; then walked. But the days were drawing
in, Mishak was sixty-four - and increasingly, for he was not convivial by
nature, he too was driven to the Willow.
Paul Ziller, when Heini
came, had hoped that they would play duets, for the repertoire for violin and
piano is varied and very beautiful. But Heini, understandably, wanted to
concentrate on a solo career and since the house was not sufficiently soundproof
to accommodate two practice sessions, the sight of Ziller carrying his Guarneri
to the cloakroom of the Day Centre once more became familiar in Belsize Park.
Hilda too altered her
routine. The Keeper of the Anthropology Department now trusted her with a key.
She took sandwiches and stayed in the museum till late, timing her arrival at
Number 27 to coincide with the ascent of Fraulein Lutzenholler onto her bedroom
chair.
That they could grow to be
grateful to the gloomy psychoanalyst was something none of them could have
foreseen, but it was so. For at 9.30, come rain or shine, she climbed on to her
chair with a long-handled broom and pounded on the floor of the Bergers'
sitting room as a sign that she was now going to bed and the music must stop.
Only, of course, that meant
Leonie could not complain about the state of the cooker so all in all, a
Festival of Light was badly needed and since she herself was vague as to how it
was performed, she took her problem to the Willow.
'I buy you a cake?' said Mrs
Weiss.
Leonie accepted and asked
the old lady for instructions. 'There are candles,' said Mrs Weiss positively.
'That I
know. One lights one each
day for eight days and they are put in a menorah.'
'How can that be?' asked Dr
Levy. 'If there are eight days there are eight candles and a menorah only has
seven branches. And there are certainly prayers. My grandmother prayed.'
'But what did she pray?'
asked Leonie, tilting her blonde head in resolute pursuit of Jewishness.
Dr Levy shrugged and Ziller
said that von Hofmann would know. 'He'll be here in a minute.'
'Why should he know? He has
no Jewish blood at all,' said Mrs Weiss dismissively.
'But he was in that Isaac
Bashevis Singer play, don't you remember? The Nebbich. That's a very
Jewish play,' said Ziller.
But von Hofmann, when he
came, was hazy. 'I wasn't on in that act,' he said, 'but it's a very beautiful
ceremony. All the actors were very much moved and Steffi bought a menorah
afterwards in the flea market. I could ask her - she's selling stockings in
Harrods.'
No one, however, wanted to
trouble Steffi who was an exceedingly tiresome woman though a good actress, and
Miss Violet and Miss Maud, who had been listening to this exchange, now said
that they'd soon have to start thinking about getting their Christmas
decorations up.
Leonie brightened,
approaching familiar ground.
'What do you do for
Christmas?' she asked the ladies.
'Well, we go to evensong,'
said Miss Maud. 'And we decorate the tea rooms with paper chains and put a
sprig of holly on each of the tables.'
'And the advent rings?'
asked Leonie.
'We don't have those,' said
Miss Maud firmly,; scenting a whiff of popery.
'But a little tree with red
apples and a sliver star?'
The ladies shook their
heads and said they didn't believe in making a fuss.
'But this is not a fuss,'
said Leonie. 'It's beautiful.' And shyly. 'I could make some Lebkuchen…
gingerbread, you know… hearts with icing and red ribbon?' '
'Georg has a big fir tree
in his garden,' said Mrs Weiss. 'I can cut pieces from it in the night when
Moira sleeps.'
'My wife brought her little
glockenspiel,' said the banker unexpectedly. 'I said to her she is stupid, but
she had it from a child.'
Back in the kitchen, Miss
Maud and Miss Violet looked at each other.
'I suppose it won't hurt,'
said Miss Maud, 'though I don't want pine needles all over the place.'
'Still it's better than
that Hanukkah thing of theirs. I mean, they won't get very far if they can't
remember how to do it,' said Miss Violet.
Mrs Burtt wrung out her
cloth and hung it over the sink, above which Ruth had pinned a diagram showing The
Life History of the Pololo Worm.
'And it'll cheer Ruth up to
see the place look pretty,' she said.
Miss Maud frowned,
wondering why their waitress should need cheering. 'She's very happy since
Heini came. She's always saying so.'
'But tired,' said Mrs
Burtt.
Three days after Leonie's
failure over the Festival of Light, Ruth called at the post office on her way
to college and drew out of her private box a small packet with a red seal which
she opened with a fast-beating heart.
Minutes later, she stood in
the middle of a crowd of hurrying people, staring down at the dark blue
passport with its golden lion, its prancing unicorn and the careless motto: Dieu
et Mon Droit.
'I am a British subject,'
said Ruth aloud, standing on the pavement opposite a greengrocer's shop and
seeing the Secretary of State in a top hat wafting her through foreign lands.
If only she could have
shown it to everyone: the naturalization certificate which confirmed her
status; the passport she held in her own right! If only she could have marched
into the Willow holding it aloft and danced with Mrs Burtt and hugged her
parents. People in Europe would have killed for what she held in her hand - yet
no one would have grudged her her luck, she knew that.
But, of course, she could
show it to no one. It was Ruth Somerville, not Ruth Berger, that His Britannic
Majesty wished to pass without let or hindrance anywhere in the world, and the
passport would have to go with the rest of her documents to be scuttled over by
the recalcitrant mice.
She was early for college.
Since Heini came, Ruth had slept with the alarm under her pillow set for 5.30
so that she could do two hours of work while it was still quiet, Now, as she
sat in the Underground, she wanted to mark this day; pay some kind of tribute -
and on an impulse she left-the train three stops before her destination and
climbed the steps of the National Gallery to look down at Trafalgar Square.
She was right, this was
the heart of her adopted city. The fountains sparkled, the lions smiled…
Through the Admiralty Arch opposite she could see the end of The Mall leading
to Buckingham Palace where the shy King lived who was being so good about his
stammer, and the soft-voiced Queen looked after the princesses on her biscuit
tin.
She tilted her head up at
Nelson on his column; the little man who was the favourite hero of the British
and who had said, 'Kiss me, Hardy,' or perhaps, 'Kismet, Hardy,' - talking
about fate - and then died. He had been so brave… but then they were brave, the
British. Their girls felled each other with hockey sticks and never cried;
their women, in earlier times, had stridden through jungles in woollen skirts
to turn the heathen to the word of God.
And she too would be strong
and brave. She would do well in the Christmas exams and stay awake for
Heini when he needed to talk late at night. It was ridiculous to think that
anyone needed more than four hours' sleep. She could do it all: her essays, her
revision, her work at the Willow and still help Heini with his interpretations.
The Will Has Only To Be
Born In Order To Triumph quoted Ruth who had read this motto on a calendar and
been much impressed.
It was only now that she
gave her mind to the letter which
Mr Proudfoot had enclosed
and saw that she was bidden to attend his office on the following afternoon.
Proudfoot had thought it
simplest to see Ruth personally and had said so to Quin. 'It would make sense
if you came together, but I suppose we can't be too careful.'
For after naturalization
came the next stage - annulment. To facilitate this, a massive document had
been prepared, requiring to be signed by both parties in the presence of a
Commissioner for Oaths - and involving Dick Proudfoot's articled clerk in
several hours of work. This affidavit was to be submitted to the courts in the
hope that it would come before a judge who would accept it as evidence of
nullity without demanding further proof. Whether this would in fact happen was
anyone's guess since the procedure involving annulment in foreign-born
nationals was under review and things that were under review never, in Mr
Proudfoot's experience, became simpler.
It so happened that Ruth
was waiting in the outer office and that he saw her first with her back turned,
looking at a small watercolour on the far wall. The sun came at a slant through
the window and touched her hair so that it was the golden tresses, the straight
back, he saw first - and immediately he steeled himself, waiting for her to
turn. Mr Proudfoot was deeply susceptible to women and had once driven his car
into a telephone kiosk on the pavement of Great Portland Street because he was
watching a girl come out of her dentist and he knew that when girls with rich
blonde hair turn round there is disappointment. At best mediocrity, at worst a
sharp, discontented nose, a petulant mouth, for God sensibly preserves his
bounty.
'Miss Berger?'
Ruth turned - and Mr
Proudfoot felt a surge of gratitude to his Creator. At the same time, his view
of Quin as a chivalrous rescuer of unfortunates receded. What surprised him now
was Quin's haste to get rid of a girl most people would have latched on to with
a bulldog bite.
'This is such a nice
picture,' she said when they had shaken hands. 'It's so friendly… the way the
tree roots curve right down into the water. It was like that where we used to
go in the summer, on the Grundlsee.'
'Yes. It was done in the
Lake District; I suppose it's the same sort of landscape.'
'Who painted it?'
'Actually, I did. When I
was a student. I used to dabble in watercolours a bit,' he said, retreating
into British modesty.
Ruth did not care for this.
'It has nothing to do with dabbling,' she said reproachfully. 'It's beautiful.
But I suppose now you paint the river and the places round here?'
'No. As a matter of fact, I
haven't put a brush to paper for years.'
'Why is that? Because there
is so much to do here?' she said, following him into the office.
'Well, yes… but I suppose I
could find time. One gets discouraged, you know, being an amateur.'
Ruth frowned. 'I don't want
to be impertinent when you've been so helpful about getting me naturalized and
now annulled - but I think that's very wrong. An amateur is someone who loves
something. In all the Haydn Quartets there is a part for an amateur - the second
violin, usually, or the cello - but it's just as beautiful.'
But the sight of the
document Mr Proudfoot had prepared for her now silenced Ruth as she waded,
biting her lip, through its several pages of parchment, its red seal, its
Gothic script and the strange words in which she wished the law to know that
she had never been laid hands on, or laid hands herself, on Quinton Alexander
St John Somerville.
'I don't know if this will
work, Miss Berger - some judges won't accept an affidavit without medical
evidence and Quin is determined not to put you through anything like that.' He
flushed, unable to pursue the subject.
'Yes. He is being so kind -
so very kind - which is why I must get this annulment through quickly so that
he can marry someone else.'
Proudfoot, who had been led
to believe that it was Ruth who was in a hurry, looked surprised.
'Does he want to marry
anyone else?'
'Perhaps not he, but other
people. Verena Plackett, for example.'
'I don't know who Verena
Plackett is, but I assure you that Quinton can look after himself. People have
been trying to marry him since he was knee-high to a goat.' He pulled the
formidable paper closer. 'Now listen, my dear, because this document is unique
and it's complicated and you have to get it right. You must sign it exactly
where I've pencilled it -there and there and again over the page - with your
full name and in the presence of a Commissioner for Oaths. He'll make a charge
and Quin has asked me to give you a five-pound note to cover the cost. Any
commissioner will do, there's sure to be one in Hampstead. When you've done it,
bring it back to me - I wouldn't trust the post; if it's lost we'll miss the
next sitting of the courts and then we're in trouble. And if there's anything
you don't understand, just let me know.'
'I think I understand it,'
said Ruth. 'Only perhaps you could wrap it in something for me?' For her straw
basket contained, in addition to her dissecting kit and lecture notes, the
remains of Pilly's sandwiches which, now that Heini was eating with them, she
took back to Belsize Park rather than feeding to the ducks.
'Don't worry - there's a
cardboard tube - it gets rolled up and put inside. I'll expect you in a few
days, then. Take care!'
'What do you think?' said
Milner, looking at Quin with his head on one side and an ill-concealed glint of
excitement in his eyes.
Quin stood looking down at
the drawer of fossil-bearing rocks which Milner had pulled open, first
unlocking the storage room with rather more formality than usually went on in
the Natural History Museum.
'You're right, of course.
It's part of a pterosaur. And I'd have sworn it was from Tendaguru. The Germans
have got two casts like that in Berlin from the 1908 expedition. I've seen
them.'
'Well, it isn't. Do you
know where this was found?'
Quin, tracing out the
beaked skull, still partly embedded in the matrix, shook his head. A
wing-lizard, immemorially old and very rare.
'On the other side of the
Kulamali Gorge - eight hundred miles away. He showed me the place on the map.
Farquarson may be no more than a white hunter, but he's no liar and he knows
Africa like the back of his hand. I've written down the exact location.'
Quin laid the bone back in
the tray. 'Are you serious? South of the Rift?'
'That's right. He didn't
know how important it was and I didn't tell him. It's a bit of luck, him not
being a palaeontologist otherwise we'd have everyone down on us like a ton of
bricks. Whereas as it is…'
Quin held up a restraining
hand. Milner had been six months in England, caught in the administration of
the civil service which ran the museum, sorting, annotating, preparing
exhibitions he regarded as a waste of time: That he wanted to be off again was
clear enough.
'I can't follow this
through now. I spent most of last year away; it isn't fair on my colleagues.'
He pushed the steel cabinet shut, turned away. 'Still, I'd like to see
Farquarson's report. You do get those sandstone plateaus there… it's not
impossible. Oh, damn you, Jack - I've got to go and set the end of term exams;
I'm a staid academic now!' "
Milner said nothing more,
content to have sown a seed. Sooner or later Quin would crack. Milner had other
chances to travel, but he would wait. Journeys weren't the same without
Somerville - and it would do the Professor good to get away. He hadn't been
quite himself the last few weeks.
Verena had returned well
satisfied with her time at Bowmont. True Quin had not declared himself, but he
had been extremely attentive at the dance, and if it hadn't been for that
madwoman throwing a stone, they might have got much further. Quin had come back
from dealing with her in a different mood: sombre and absentminded, and who
could blame him? Having an insane person on one's estate could hardly be a
pleasure.
Meanwhile back at the
Lodge, she settled down to work. For one of the best ways to approach Quinton
was through his subject and Verena, as the Christmas exams approached, worked
harder than she had ever worked before.
Needless to say the
Placketts did everything they could to help. No one was allowed to talk outside
the study door, the maids knew better than to hoover when Verena was writing
her essay; a special consignment of textbooks was brought over from the
library, including reference books which were needed by the other students.
Not only did Verena work,
she also exercised with even greater vigour for she had never lost sight of her
ideal: that of accompanying Quin to foreign parts. There was only one point on
which she had been doubtful and Quin himself now provided the assurance that
she sought.
It happened at a dinner
party to which her mother had invited Colonel Hillborough of the Royal
Geographical Society. Hillborough was a celebrated traveller and a modest man
who worked selflessly for the Society, and he had expressed the hope that Professor
Somerville, whom he knew well, would be present.
Whatever Quin's views on
the Placketts' dinners, there could be no question of refusing, and three days
after he had talked to Milner in the museum, he found himself once more sitting
at Verena's right hand.
It was a good evening.
Hillborough had just come back from the Antarctic and seen Shackleton's hut
exactly as he had left it: a frozen ham, still edible, hanging from the
ceiling, his felt boots lying on a bunk. As he and Quin talked of the great journeys
of the past, most of the other guests fell silent, content to listen.
'And you?' asked
Hillborough as the ladies prepared to leave the room. 'Are you off again soon?'
Quin, smiling, put up a
hand. 'Don't tempt me, sir!'
It was then that Verena
asked the question that had long been on her mind. 'Tell me, Professor
Somerville,' she said, giving him his title, though in private, now that she
had waltzed in his arms, she always used his Christian name. 'Is there any
reason why women should not go on the kind of expeditions that you organize?'
Quin turned to her. 'No
reason at all,' he said firmly. 'Absolutely none. It's a subject I feel
strongly about, as it happens - giving women a chance.'
Verena, that night, was a
happy woman. It could not mean nothing, the vehemence of his assurance, the
warmth in his eyes - and she now decided that exercising in her rooms was not
enough. If she wanted to be sufficiently fleet of foot she would need something
more challenging - and the obvious game for that was squash. Squash, however,
needs a partner and fighting down her hesitation (for she did not want to
elevate him too markedly) she invited Kenneth Easton to accompany her to the
Athletic Club.
She could not have known
the effect of this summons on poor Kenneth, living with his widowed mother in
the quiet suburb of Edgware Green. Piggy banks were emptied, post office
accounts raided, to equip Kenneth with a racquet and a pair of crisp white
shorts to brush his even whiter knees.
And the very next Tuesday,
he had the happiness of leaving Thameside with the Vice Chancellor's daughter,
bound for health and fitness on the courts.
'I feel so guilty,'
said Ruth to the sheep. 'So ashamed.' Since her naturalization she had taken to
talking to it in English. 'I don't know how I came to do such a
thing.'
The sheep shifted a hoof
and butted its head against the side of the pen. It had consumed the stem of a
Brussels sprout which Mishak had dug out of the cold ground of Belsize Park,
and seemed to be offering sympathy.
'I know it's wrong to
complain to you when you have such a hard life,' she went on - and indeed the
future of the sheep, rejected by the meat trade due to its contamination by
science, and by science due to its solitary state, was bleak. 'I would give
anything to be able to help you and I know exactly where you should be… it's a
Paradise, I promise you. There are green, green fields and the air smells of
the sea and every now and then a tractor comes and tips mangelwurzels onto the
grass.'
But it was better not to
talk about Bowmont even to the sheep. She still dreamt about it almost nightly,
but that would pass. Everything passed - that was something all the experts
were agreed about.
'I just hope he's in a good
mood,' she said, picking up her basket.
But this was unlikely.
Quin, since Heini came, had scarcely thrown her a word. Well, why should he?
The shame of that moment when she had thrown the stone would be with her for
always. There were other rumours about the Professor: that he was living hard,
burning the midnight oil.
She made her way to the
lecture theatre, and as he entered her worst fears were confirmed.
'He looks as though he's
had a night on the tiles,' said Sam.
Ruth nodded. The thin face
was pale, the forehead exceedingly volcanic, and someone seemed to have sat on
his gown.
Yet when he began to
lecture the magic was still there. Only one thing had changed - his exit.
Moving with deceptive casualness towards the door, Quin delivered his last
sentence - and was gone. Alone among the staff, Professor Somerville did not
get thanked by Verena Plackett.
She had been told to come
at two, but he was late and she had time to examine the hominid, looking a
little naked without Aunt Frances' scarf, and wander over to the sand tray
where the jumbled reptile bones were slowly becoming recognizable.
Quin, coming into the room,
saw her bending over the tray as she had done in Vienna. It seemed to him that
she looked as she had looked then; lost and disconsolate, but he was in no mood
for pity. His own evening with Claudine Fleury had been an unexpected failure.
Their relationship was of long standing, well understood. A Parisienne whose
first two husbands had not amused her, she lived in the luxurious Mayfair house
of her father, a concert impresario frequently absent in America, and was the
kind of Frenchwoman every full-bloodied male dreams up: petite and dark-eyed
with a fastidious elegance which transformed everything she touched.
Last night, the evening had
fallen into its accustomed pattern: dinner at Rules, dancing at the Domino and
then home to the comforts of her intimately curtained bed.
If there had been a fault,
it had been his, he knew that, and he could only hope that Claudine had noticed
nothing. The truth was that everything which had drawn him to her: her expertise,
her detachment, the knowledge that she took love lightly, now failed in its
charm. He had experienced that most lonely of sensations, lovemaking from which
the soul is absent - and Ruth, seeing his closed face, laced her hands together
and prepared for the worst.
'What can I do for you?'
Ruth took a deep breath.
'You can forgive me,' she said.
Quin's eyebrows rose. 'Good
God! Is it as bad as that? What do you want me to forgive you for?'
'I'll tell you… only please
will you promise me not to mention Freud because it makes me very
angry?'
'I shall probably find that
quite easy,' he said. 'I frequently go for months at a time without mentioning
him. But what has he done to upset you?'
'It isn't him, exactly,'
said Ruth. 'It's Fraulein Lutzenholler.' And as Quin looked blank, 'She's a
psychoanalyst: she comes from Breslau and she's been nothing but trouble! She
burns everything - even boiled eggs and it's difficult to burn those - and her
soup gets all over the stove and my mother is sure that it's because of her we
have mice. And every night at half-past nine she gets on a chair and thumps on
the ceiling to stop Heini practising. And then she dares …'Ruth's
indignation was such that she had to stop.
'Dares what?'
'She dares to talk to me
about Freud and what he said about losing things.'
'What did he say?'
'That we lose what we want
to lose… and forget what we want to forget. It's all in The Interpretation
of Dreams or something. I would never have told her that I'd left the
papers on the bus, but there was no one else in and I'd been up and down to the
depot and the Lost Property Office and I was absolutely frantic. I didn't tell
her what I'd left on the bus, of course, only that it was important -
and then she dares to talk about my unconscious - a woman who leaves black hair
all over the bathtub and tortures carrots to death at ninety degrees
centigrade!'
Quin leant across the desk.
'Ruth, would you just tell me very quietly what this is about? What did you
leave on the bus?'
She pushed back her hair. 'The
annulment papers. All those documents that Mr Proudfoot gave me. They were in a
big cardboard tube and he took such trouble!'
Quin had risen, walked over
to the window. His back was turned towards her and his shoulders were shaking.
He was really angry, then.
'I'm so sorry. I'm terribly
sorry.'
Quin turned and she saw
that he had been trying not to laugh.
'You think it's funny,"
she said, amazed. 'Well, yes, I'm afraid I do,' he said apologetically. He came
over to stand beside her. 'Now tell me exactly how it happened. In sequence, if
possible.'
'Well, I'd been to Mr
Proudfoot and I had my straw basket and this huge scroll and I thought I would
go straight to Hampstead on a bus to get it signed by the Commissioner for
Oaths because I knew there was one in the High Street. And I got one of those
old-fashioned buses which are open on top, you know, and of course there aren't
any double-deckers in Vienna, so I went upstairs and I got the front seat too!
And I was just looking at everything because being so high and so open is so
lovely and when we came to the edge of the Heath I looked down and there was a
patch of Herrenpilze; you know - those big mushrooms we found on the
Grundlsee? They were behind the ladies lavatory and I knew they wouldn't be
there long because you sometimes get bloodshed up there with the refugees
fighting each other for them, so I rushed down to get off at the next stop and
pick them because food is a bit tight since Heini - I mean my mother is always
glad of something extra. And when I turned into the park I realized that I'd
forgotten the papers, but I wasn't in too much of a panic because I was sure
they'd be at the depot, but they weren't and they weren't in the Lost Property
Office either and I've been back and forward the last two days and it's just
hopeless. And I don't know how to explain to Mr Proudfoot who's been so kind
and taken so much trouble.'
'Don't worry, I'll tell
him. Only, Ruth, don't you think there's a case now for telling Heini and your
parents about our marriage? We haven't after all done anything we need be
ashamed of. I'm sure they'd be -'
'Oh, no, please, please!'
Ruth had seized his arm and was looking entreatingly into his face. 'I beg of
you… My mother's very good, she does all Heini's washing and she feeds him and
she doesn't complain when he's in the bath for a long time… but being a concert
pianist is something she doesn't altogether understand. You see, when Paul
Ziller found a job for Heini two evenings a week playing at Lyons Corner House,
she really wanted him to take it.'
'But he didn't?'
'No. He said once you go
down that road you never get back to being taken seriously as a musician, but,
of course, Paul Ziller does it and my mother… She's already so grateful to you
for getting work for my father and she'd come to see you and you'd hate
it.'
'Would I?' said Quin, in a
voice she hadn't heard him use before. 'Well, perhaps. Anyway, I'll phone Dick
and he'll get some new papers drawn up. Don't worry, we've probably only lost a
month or two.'
She smiled. 'Thank you.
It's such a relief. I can face my essay on "Parasitism in the Hermit
Crab" now. It was just a blur before.'
It was not till the end of
the day that Quin, mysteriously restored to good humour, could ring his lawyer.
'She has done what?'
said Proudfoot incredulously.
'I've told you. Left the
annulment papers on the bus.'
'I don't believe it! They
were in a damn great roll as long as an arm and tied up with red tape.'
'Well, she has,' said Quin,
outlining the saga of the edible boletus. 'So it's back to the drawing board,
I'm afraid. Can you get another lot drawn up?'
'I can, but not this week -
my clerk's off ill. And after that I'm going to Madeira for a fortnight so you
can forget the next sitting of the courts.'
'Well, it can't be helped,'
said Quin - and it seemed to Dick that if he wanted to marry Verena Plackett,
he did not do so badly. 'What are you going to do in Madeira?'
'Have a holiday,' said
Proudfoot. 'And paint. Your wife thought I should take it up again.'
'My -' Quin broke off, aware
that he had never used those words about Ruth.
'Well, she is your wife,
isn't she? God knows why you want to get rid of her - you must be mad. However,
it's none of my business.'
'No, it isn't,' said Quin
pleasantly. 'And I warn you, when she comes to see you again don't mention
Professor Freud or you'll get your head bitten off.'
'Why the devil should I
mention him? I don't understand the first thing about all that stuff.'
'That's all right then. I'm
only warning you.'
It was Paul Ziller who
introduced Heini to Mantella.
'He's a very good agent. A
bit of a thruster, but they have to be. Why don't you go and see him?'
'Do you use him?'
Ziller shook his head.
'He's only interested in soloists and celebrities.'
'Well, you could be a
soloist.'
'No. I'm an ensemble
player.' Ziller was silent, pursuing his thoughts. Returning to the Day Centre
to re-establish his claim, he had found, among the wash basins, an emaciated
and exceedingly shabby man playing the cello - and playing it well. This had
turned out to be Milan Karvitz from the Prague Chamber Orchestra, just returned
from the International Brigade in Spain… and Karvitz, in turn, had brought
along the viola player from the disbanded Berliner Ensemble. The three of them
played well together though it was a tight fit in the cloakroom, but the
repertoire for string trio was limited and now a man had written from
Northumberland where he was working as a chauffeur. Ziller knew him by
reputation - a fine violinist, an unselfish player- but it was out of the
question. He could never replace Biberstein; never. 'Anyway,' he went on,
pulling himself out of his reverie, 'I've spoken to him about you. Why don't
you go along?'
Mantella, though brought up
in Hamburg, was a South American by birth, with an olive skin, a pointed black
beard and a legendary nose for sniffing out talent. In Heini, presenting
himself the following day in the elegant Bond Street office, he at once saw
possibilities. The musical gift could not be in doubt - all those medals from
the Conservatoire and a debut with the Philharmonic promised in Vienna - but
more importantly, the boy had instant emotional appeal. Even Mantella, however,
could not get a concert for a pianist unknown in England and not yet
established on the continent.
He had, however, a
suggestion to make.
'There's an important piano
competition here at the end of May. It's sponsored by Boothebys - the music
publishers. They're big in the States and here too. No, don't look like that;
it may be commercially sponsored, but the judges are absolutely first class.
They've got Kousselovsky and Arthur Hanneman and the Director of the Amsterdam
Conservatoire. The Russians are sending two candidates and Leblanc's entered
from Paris.'
'He's good,' said Heini.
'I tell you, it's big.
After all, Glyndebourne is run by auctioneers! The commercial sponsorship means
that the prizes are substantial and the press is getting interested. The finals
are held in the Albert Hall - they've got the BBC Symphonia to accompany the
concertos - and that isn't all!' He paused for dramatic effect. 'Jacques Fleury
is coming over from the States!'
That settled it. Fleury was
one of the most influential concert impresarios in the world with houses in
Paris and London and New York. 'What are the concertos? I could learn a new
one, but I've only got a rotten little piano and I'd rather play something I've
studied.'
Mantella pulled out the
brochure. 'Beethoven's Number 3, the Tchaikovsky Number 1… Rachmaninoff 2… and
Mozart Number 17'
Heini smiled. 'Really?
Number 17? The Starling Concerto? Well, well!'
Mantella's glance was
sharp. 'What do you mean, the Starling Concerto?'
'The last movement is
supposed to be based on the song of a starling Mozart had. My girlfriend would
want me to play that -I used to call her that… my starling - but it isn't showy
enough. I'll play the Tchaikovsky.'
'Wait a minute - didn't I
see something in the papers? Did she ever work as a waitress?'
'Yes, she did. She still
does in the evening, but she won't for long; I'll see to that.'
'I remember… some article
by a chap who went into a refugee cafe. There was a picture… lots of hair and a
snub nose.' Mantella twiddled his silver pencil. The girl had been very pretty
- girls with short noses always photographed well. 'I think you should play the
Mozart.'
Heini shook his head. 'It's
too easy. Mozart wrote it for one of his pupils. I'd rather play the
Tchaikovsky.'
'You can give them the
pyrotechnics in the preliminary rounds. You get the chance to play six pieces
and only two of them are obligatory: a Handel suite and Beethoven's Hammerklavier.
You can dazzle them with Liszt, Chopin, Busoni… show them nothing's too
difficult. Then when you're through to the finals come on quietly and play the
Mozart.'
'But surely - '
'Heini, believe me; I know
what I'm talking about. The Russians will go for Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninoff
and you can't beat them. And we can use the story - you and the girl. Your
starling. After all, we're not just trying to win, we're trying to get you
engagements. America's not out of the question - I have an office there.'
'America!' Heini's eyes
widened. 'It's what I've dreamt of. You mean you'd be able to get me a visa?'
'If there's enough interest
in you. Fleury could fix it if he wished. Now here are the conditions of entry
and the dates. There's a registration fee, but I expect you can manage that.'
'Yes.' The Bergers were funny about Dr Friedlander -they wouldn't take anything
from him, but that was silly. The dentist was musical; he'd be glad to help.
'Good.' Mantella rose as a
sign that the interview was over. 'Come back next week with the completed form
- and bring the girl!'
Heini left the office in a
daze. Passing Hart and Sylvesters in Bruton Street, he stopped to stare at a
pair of hand-stitched gloves in the window. Liszt had always come onto the
platform in doeskin gloves and dropped them onto the floor before he went to
the instrument. He was glad Mantella had mentioned Liszt - he'd play the Dante
Sonata; it was hellishly difficult but that was all to the good. It was time
virtuoso playing came back into fashion. People like Ziller were all very well,
but even the greatest musicians had not been averse to an element of
showmanship.
How pleased Ruth would be
that he had decided to play the Mozart! Well, Mantella had decided, but there
was no need to mention that; no point in depriving her of the happiness she
would feel. And if it meant America! They would be married over there - he'd
rather dreaded a scrappy wedding in the squalor of Belsize Park.
Abandoning the
hand-stitched gloves, dreaming his dreams, Heini made his way to Dr
Friedlander's surgery in Harley Street.
'She's done it!' said Dr
Felton gleefully, pushing away the pile of exam papers he had been marking.
He'd checked and double checked to make sure he'd been completely fair, and he
had. Ruth had beaten Verena Plackett by two marks in the Marine Zoology paper,
and by three in the Parasitology.
'Which, considering what
she's been up against, is quite an achievement,' said Dr Elke, inviting her
fellow members of staff to a celebratory glass of sherry in her room.
They had all been worried
about Ruth who had been found asleep in various unexpected places in the
college and had ended up in the Underground terminus of the Northern Line after
a longer night than usual discussing the fingering of Beethoven's Hammerklavier.
'And Moira's decided to
adopt!' said Dr Felton, in the grip of end-of-term euphoria. 'So no more
thermometers!'
The marks, when they went
up on the board, gave general satisfaction. Verena was top in the other two
theory papers and since one of these was Palaeontology, she was content. Sam
had done unexpectedly well, and both Huw and Janet were comfortably through.
But it was Pilly's results
that were the most surprising. She had failed only the Physiology practical in
which she had fainted while pricking her finger to get a sample of blood, and
was to be allowed to take her Finals without a resit.
'And it's all because of
you, Ruth,' said Pilly, hugging her friend.
The party on the last day
of term was thus a cheerful affair. Heini came, and even those of Ruth's
friends who had been critical of his demands were charmed by his broken accent
and wistful smile. Since his meeting with Mantella, he had been in excellent
spirits and when Sam produced a pile of music from the piano stool and begged
him to play, he did so without demur.
Quin, on the same evening,
had been bidden to a pre-Christmas gathering of eminent academics at the Vice
Chancellor's Lodge. Arriving purposefully late, he paused for a few moments
outside the lighted windows of the Union Hall.
Heini was at the piano and
Ruth sat by his side. She wore the velvet dress she had worn on the Orient
Express and her head was bent in total concentration as she followed the score.
Then she rose, one arm curved over the boy's head… her fingers, in one deft
movement, flicked the page.
'You have to be like a wave
when you turn over,' she had told him on the train. 'You have to be completely
anonymous.'
Quin walked on across the
darkened quadrangle. It seemed to him that he had never seen an action express
such dedication, such gracefully given service - or such love!
Christmas Eve in the Willow
would have surprised passers-by who were given to understand that it was a
refugee cafe largely frequented by displaced persons and run by austere and
frugal spinsters.
The tables had been pushed
to the edge of the floor and in the centre stood the tree in all its festive
glory. This tree had not been dug out of the garden of Mrs Weiss' son, Georg,
while her daughter-in-law slept, though the old lady had been perfectly willing
to attempt this foul deed. It had been bought in a shop, yet it was Mrs Weiss
who was its source. A week before Christmas the hard-pressed Moira had paid a
secret visit to Leonie and struck a bargain. A liberal sum of money which Moira
could well spare if Leonie could guarantee that her mother-in-law was out of
the house for the whole of Christmas Eve.
'I've got some people
coming in - clients of George's; important ones. You understand?'
Leonie, at first, had been
inclined to refuse, but on reflection it seemed to be a fair bargain. She
herself, while still prosperous and in her native land, would have paid twice
what Moira was offering to be sure of Christmas Eve without Mrs Weiss. She took
the money and went shopping with the old lady for the tree, the silver tinsel,
the candles, the spices, the rum…
Now the cafe was a bower of
green, the glockenspiel of the banker's wife set up a sweet tinkling over the
hubbub of voices… Voices which were stilled as Miss Maud, now primed in the
mysteries of an Austrian Holy Night, handed the matches to Ruth.
'Careful!' said Professor
Berger, as he had said every year since Ruth was old enough to light the
candles on the tree. He had travelled overnight on the bus from Manchester and
would greatly have preferred to be at home with his family, but now as he
looked at the circle of faces and touched his daughter's head, he was glad they
had come together with their friends.
'I never seen it like
that,' said Mrs Burtt. 'Not with real candles.'
And Miss Violet and Miss
Maud forgot the needles dropping on the floor and the wax dripping on to the
tablecloths and even the appalling risk of fire, for it was beyond race or
belief or nationality, this incandescent symbol of joy and peace.
Then came the presents. How
these people, some of whom could scarcely afford to eat, had found gifts
remained a mystery, but no one was forgotten. Dr Levy had discovered a postcard
of the bench where Leonie had been overcome by pigeons and made for it a wooden
frame. Mrs Burtt received a scroll in which Ruth, in blank verse, proclaimed
her as Queen of the Willow. Even the poodle had a present: a bone marrow
pudding baked on the disputed cooker at Number 27. :
But Heini's presents were
the best. It had occurred to Heini that while he was borrowing money from Dr
Fried-lander for the competition, he might as well borrow a little extra for
Christmas, and the dentist had been perfectly happy to lend it to him. So Heini
had bought silk stockings for Leonie and chocolates for Aunt Hilda and a copy
of The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius for the Professor who was fond
of the Roman Stoic. This had used up more money than he expected and when he
went into a flower shop to buy red roses for Ruth, he found the cost of a bunch
to be exorbitant. It was the assistant who had suggested a different kind of
rose - a Christmas rose, pale-petalled and golden-hearted, and put a single
bloom, cradled in moss, into a cellophane box -and now, as he saw Ruth's face,
he knew that nothing could have pleased her more.
After the presents came the
food - and here the horsehair purse of Mrs Weiss had turned into a horn of
plenty, emitting plates of salami and wafer-thin smoked ham… of almonds and
apricots, and a wild white wine from the Wachau for which Leonie had scoured
the shops of Soho.
But at eleven, Ruth and
Heini slipped out together and walked hand in hand through the damp, misty
streets.
'It was lovely, wasn't it?'
said Ruth. 'And you look so elegant!' On the first day of the holidays, she had
returned to the progressively educated children of the lady weaver and used the
money she had earned to buy Heini a silk scarf to wear with his evening
clothes. 'But, oh if only it would snow! I miss snow so much - the quietness
and the glitter. Do you remember the icicles hanging from the wall lamps in the
Hofburg? And the C Minor Mass coming out of the Augustiner chapel, and the
bells?'
They had reached the door
of Number 27. 'I'll play it for you,' said Heini pulling her into the house.
'Come on! I'll play the snow and the choirboys and the bells. I'll play
Christmas in Vienna.'
And he did. He sat down at
the Bosendorfer and he made it for her in music as he had promised. He played
Leopold
Mozart's "Sleigh
Ride" and wove in the carols that the Vienna Choirboys sang: "Puer
Nobis" and the rocking lullaby which Mary had sung to her babe… He played
the tune the old man had wheezed out on his hurdy-gurdy in the market where the
Bergers bought their tree - and then it became Papageno's song from The
Magic Flute which had been Ruth's Christmas treat since she was eight
years old. He played "The Skater's Waltz" to which she'd whirled
round the ice rink in the Prater and moved down to the base to mime the deep
and solemn bells of St Stephan's summoning the people to midnight mass. And he
ended with the piece he had played for her every year on the Steinway in the
Felsengasse - 'their' tune: Mozart's consoling and ravishing B Minor Adagio
which he had been practising when first they met.
Then he closed the lid of
the piano and got to his feet.
'Ruth,' he said huskily, 'I
liked your present, but there is only one present I want and need - and I need
it desperately.'
'What?' said Ruth, and her
heart beat so loudly that she thought he must be able to hear.
'You!' said Heini. 'Nothing
else. Just you. And soon please, darling. Very soon!'
And Ruth, still caught in
the wonder of the music, moved forward into his arms and said, 'Yes. It's what
I want too. I want it very much.'
Quin's Christmas Eve was
very different.
He had walked since
daybreak and now stood on the top of the Cheviots looking across at the rolling
slopes of blond grass bent by the wind and the fierce storm clouds gathering
above the sea. Tomorrow he would do his duty by his parishioners, read the
lesson in church, and accompany his aunt to the Rothleys' annual party - but
this day he had claimed for himself.
Yet when he began to apply
his mind to the problem which had brought him up here, he found there was no
decision to be made. It had made itself, heaven knew when, in that part of the
brain so beloved of Professor Freud.
Instead of thought came
images. A steamer to Dar es Salaam… the river boat to Lindi… a few days with
the Commissioner to hire porters. And then the long trek across the great game
plains on the far side of the Rift. He had dreamt of that journey when he was
working in Tanganyika all those years ago - and if Farquarson was telling the
truth… if there really was an outcrop of fossil-bearing sandstone in the
Kulamali…
As he saw the landscape, so
he saw the people he would take. Milner, of course, and Jacobson from the museum's
Geology Department… Alec Younger, back from the East Indies and longing to be
off again… Colonel Hillborough who'd had his fill of administration and would
harness the resources of the Geographical Society to the trip… And one other
person; someone young to whom he'd give a break. One of the third years,
perhaps. It would depend on the exam results, but young Sam Marsh was a
possibility.
Africa had been his first
love: the bone pits of Tendaguru had set him on his way professionally and if
this was to be his last journey it would be a fitting end to his travels. There
were other advantages in going to Kulamali. The territory was British ruled and
from it one could go through other protectorates back to the sea. No danger
then, if war came, of being locked up as a foreigner. He'd be able to make his
way back home and enlist.
Another decision,
seemingly, had already been made in some part of his mind. This was not a
journey to be packed into the summer vacation. He was leaving Thameside, and
leaving it for good.
'I must say sometimes I
wish the human heart really was just a thick-walled rubber bulb, don't you?'
said Ruth to Janet, with whom she had stayed behind to draw a model of the
circulatory system kindly constructed for them by Dr Fitzsimmons.
Nearly two months had
passed since Christmas, and Heini's passionate plea that they should be
properly together was about to be answered at last. Ruth had not delayed so
long on purpose. She wanted to be like the heroine of La Traviata who
had sung about living utterly and then dying and she knew that in giving
herself to Heini she was serving the cause of music. Heini, who was studying
the Dante Sonata for the competition, had become very interested in the
composer's private life and Liszt (who was famous for being demonic) had
already been through a number of countesses by the time he was Heini's age, so that
it was entirely understandable that Heini did not feel able to do justice to
his compositions while in a state of physical frustration.
All the same, it hadn't
been easy. The opportunities for being demonic at Number 27 were nonexistent
and they couldn't afford a hotel. So she had turned to Janet, who had so
completely got over being a vicar's daughter, and Janet had come up trumps.
'You can have my flat,' she
had said. 'We'll have to find out when the other two are away, but Corinne goes
home most weekends and Hilary quite often works all day Saturday; I'll let you
know when it's safe.'
And the day before, Janet
had let her know. The very next Saturday, Ruth could have the whole afternoon
to be with Heini. Now, looking at her friend, Janet said: 'You don't have to,
you know. No one has to. Some people just aren't any good unless they're
married and it seems to me you may be one of them.'
'It's just cowardice,' said
Ruth, rubbing out a capillary tube which was threatening to run off the page.
'If you can do it, so can I.'
Janet's reply was a little
disconcerting. 'Yes, I can and I do. Someone started me off when I was sixteen
and I was ashamed because my father was a vicar and I wanted to show I wasn't a
prig. And once you start, you go on. But I'm twenty-one and I'm a bit tired of
it already and sometimes I wonder what the point of it all is.'
It was as they were packing
up their belongings that Ruth, looking sideways at Janet, said: 'Do you think I
ought to read a book about it first?'
'Good God, Ruth, you do
nothing but read books! You must know more about the physiology of the
reproductive system than anyone in the world.'
'I meant… a sort of manual.
A "How to do it" one, like you have for mending motorbikes.'
'You can if you like. If
you go to Foyles and go up to the second floor you can read one free. They've
got half a dozen of them in the Human Biology section. The assistants won't
bother you; they're used to it.'
So on the following day,
Ruth went to Charing Cross in her lunch hour and Pilly insisted on accompanying
her. Ruth had not meant to burden Pilly with the ecstatic experience she was
about to undergo, but Pilly had been so hurt when Ruth had secret conversations
with Janet that she had let her into the secret. Pilly had been very admiring; 'You
are brave,’ she said frequently, but she had taken to bringing along
cod -liver oil capsules in her lunch box and urging Ruth to swallow them, and
this was not quite the image Ruth had in mind.
'I won't come upstairs with
you,' said Pilly. 'I'm sure I won't be able to understand the diagrams and
there are probably going to be a lot of names. I'll wait for you in Cookery.'
Pilly was right. There were
a lot of names and the diagrams were deeply dispiriting. One would just have to
rely on living utterly.
'It'll be all right, Ruth,'
said Janet when they got back to college. 'Honestly. I'll take you to the flat
tomorrow and show you where everything is. There's just one thing you want to
be careful of.'
Ruth swallowed. 'Getting
pregnant, you mean?'
'No, not that - obviously
Heini will see to that. It's about his socks.'
'What about them?' said
Ruth, feeling her heart pound at this new threat.
Janet laid a hand on her
arm. 'Try to make sure that he takes them off early on. A man standing there
with nothing on and then those dark socks… it can throw you a bit. But after
all, you love him. There's really nothing to worry about at all.'
Janet's flat was in
Bloomsbury, in one of those little streets behind the British Museum. Had she
climbed down the fire escape which led from the kitchen, Ruth would have found
herself a stone's throw from the basement where Aunt Hilda worked. Hilda
wouldn't be shocked by what she was about to do. The Mi-Mi were very easy
going; everyone in Bechuanaland took love lightly.
But her parents…
Ruth forced her mind away
from what her parents would think. She had so hoped that the annulment would be
through by now - then she could at least have got engaged to Heini. But it
wasn't and that was her fault and another reason for not keeping him waiting
any longer.
The flat was very Bohemian;
the furniture was sort of tacked together and there wasn't much of it and
everything was very dusty. Still, that was a good thing. Mimi had been a
Bohemian, arriving with her candle and her tiny frozen hands and not fussing
any more than the heroine of La Traviata about being married. She had
died too, of course, clutching her little muff, but not from sin, from
consumption - one had to remember that.
Heini should be here any
moment now. She had cleaned the sink and swept the kitchen floor and unwrapped
the wine that Janet had brought her as a good luck present. Ruth had been
worried about this -Janet was dreadfully hard up - but Janet had waved her
protests away.
'It was a special offer
from the Co-op,' she said.
The wine would be a big
help, Ruth was sure of that, remembering what it had done for her on the Orient
Express.
Fighting down her
nervousness, she opened the door of Corinne's room which was the one Janet
suggested they use. It had a double bed - well, a double mattress - covered in
some interesting coloured sacking. Corinne was an art student; there were
drawings tacked round the wall which she had done in life class. All the women
had breasts which soared upwards and Doric-looking thighs. Heini was going to
be very disappointed - perhaps it would be best to make the room properly dark.
But when she began to draw the curtains, the bamboo rail came clattering down
on to the floor and she only just had time to replace it before the doorbell
rang.
'Heini! Darling!' But
though he embraced her, Heini did not look happy. 'Is everything all right? Did
you get them?'
'Yes, I did in the end, but
I've had an awful time. The slot machines were right up against each other and
the instructions had been ripped off so the first time I put a sixpence in I
got a bar of chocolate - that revolting stuff with squishy cream in the
middle.'
'Oh, Heini; how awful!'
Heini never ate chocolate in case it gave him acne.
'Then I tried the other one
and the money got stuck. I had to hit it with my shoe while some idiot came
past and sniggered. I never want to go through that again!'
Guilt surged through Ruth.
Heini had asked her to go to the chemist and see to 'all that' and it was true
that her English was much better than his, but there were words one wasn't
absolutely sure about, even if one looked them up in the dictionary. Particularly
if one looked them up in the dictionary. At the same time, she wondered if he
had brought the chocolate. She had missed her lunch, but it was probably better
not to ask.
'Anyway, we're here,' she
said, helping him off with his coat. And then bravely: 'Would you like a bath?'
Heini nodded - he must have
read the same book as she had; the one which said that a bath beforehand was a
good idea - and followed her into the bathroom where she lit the geyser and
turned on the tap.
The effect was dramatic.
There was a loud bang, gusts of steam erupted, and a purple flame.
'Good God, we can't use
that!' said Heini. 'It's worse than Belsize Park.'
'You don't think it'll calm
down?'
'No I don't.' Heini had
grabbed a towel and was holding it to his nose. 'Emile Zola was killed by a
leaking stove.'
'Well, never mind,' said
Ruth, turning it off. (Not all the books had recommended hot baths. Some
believed in naturalness.) 'Let's go and have some wine.'
They returned to the
kitchen and she poured a glass for Heini and another for herself.
'We'd better drink a
toast,' she said.
Heini smiled: 'To our
love!' he said.
It was at this moment that
they heard a series of frantic, high-pitched squeaks outside on the fire
escape. Ruth opened the door and a black cat ran into the room, carrying a bird
in its mouth. The bird was a sparrow and it was not yet dead.
'Oh, God!'
'Shoo it out for heaven's
sake!'
'I think it lives here. Janet
said something about a cat.'
'It doesn't matter if it
lives here or not.'
Heini rose, chased the cat
out, and bolted the door.
'We should have killed it,'
said Ruth.
'I can't kill cats without
a gun.'
'Not the cat. The bird.'
Feeling distinctly queasy,
she lifted her glass and drank. Sour and chill, the wine crashed into her
stomach. Seemingly there was wine and wine…
'Come on, Ruth! Let's go
into the bedroom.'
'Yes. Only Heini, I'd like
to get into the mood a bit. Couldn't we have some music?'
'I am in the
mood,' said Heini crossly. But he followed her into the sitting room where a
pile of records was heaped untidily onto a low table.
'Oh, look!' she
said delightedly, 'They've got Highlights from La Traviata?
But, of course, musicians
do not listen to highlights - it is not to be expected - and Heini was
beginning to look hurt.
'You do love me, don't
you?'
'Heini, you know I do!'
He held out both hands,
boyish, appealing. She put hers into them. They made their way into the
bedroom. And he was taking off his socks - someone must have warned him! It was
going to be all right!'
'Oh, damnation! This place
is a tip! I've got a drawing pin in my foot.'
He had subsided on to the
bed, clutching his left foot from which, sure enough, a drop of blood now
oozed.
'It's not the part you
pedal with,' said Ruth who could always read his thoughts. 'It's right on the
side. But I'll get a bit of plaster.'
'And some iodine,' called
Heini as she made for the door. 'The floor must be knee-deep in germs.'
She found some iodine in
the bathroom and a roll of zinc plaster, but no scissors. Carrying the plaster
into the kitchen, she searched the drawers but without success. Eventually she
took a kitchen knife and started to hack off a strip.
'It's stopped bleeding,'
called Heini. 'If you just disinfect it, it'll be all right.'
Carrying the iodine into
the bedroom, she anointed the sole of Heini's foot. Heini was being brave, not
wincing.
'We'll have to wait for it
to dry.'
'It won't take long,' he
said. 'Why don't you get undressed?'
'I'll just take the iodine
back. It would be awful if we spilled it.'
She went past the life
class pictures, past a small grey feather dropped from the breast of the little
bird, and restored the iodine bottle. Returning, she found that Heini was in
bed.
It could be postponed no
longer, then - the living utterly. Ruth crossed her arms and pulled her sweater
over her head.
On the same afternoon as
Heini was learning to be demonic in Bloomsbury, Quin made his way to the
Natural History Museum to confer with his assistant about the coming journey.
'I'm afraid I have bad news
for you,' said Milner, climbing down from the scaffolding on which he was
attending to the neck bones of a brontosaurus.
But he was smiling. Since
Quin had told him they were off in June, he had been in an excellent mood.
'What kind of bad news?'
asked Quin.
'I'll tell you in private,'
said Milner mysteriously, and together they made their way through the echoing
dinosaur hall to Milner's cubbyhole in the basement. 'It's Brille-Lamartaine,'
he went on. 'He's got wind of your trip and he wants to come! He's been lurking
and hinting and making a thorough nuisance of himself. I haven't said a word,
but something must have leaked out.'
'Good God! I thought he was
in Brussels.'
Brille-Lamartaine was the
Belgian geologist whose spectacles had been stepped on by a yak. It isn't often
that a member of an expedition is a disaster without a single redeeming
feature, but Brille-Lamartaine had achieved this distinction without even
trying.
'I wonder how he heard?'
'He's been spending a lot
of time at the Geographical Society. Hillborough's totally discreet but
something may have leaked out.'
'I'll tell you what,' said
Quin, 'if he brings up the subject again, tell him I'm bringing a woman. One of
my students. A young life-enhancing woman greedy for experience with the
opposite sex.'
Milner was appreciative.
Brille-Lamartaine was terrified of women and convinced that every one had
designs both on his portly frame and his inheritance from a maiden aunt in Ghent
'I shall like to do that,'
he said.
But as he left the museum,
Quin knew that he could no longer postpone telling his staff that he was
leaving. The Placketts could wait till the statutory term's notice at Easter,
but to let Roger and Elke and Humphrey hear the news from others would be
unpardonable.
As it happened, Roger was
in the lab, using the weekend to catch up with his research, and the look on
his face when Quin spoke was hard to bear.
'It'll be a desert without
you,' he said and turned away to hide his distress. 'Elke thought this might
happen, but I hoped…Oh, hell!'
'If it's any consolation to
you, I think next year may see us all scattered,' said Quin. 'This war, if it
comes, won't be like the last one. I've seen some pretty weird contingency
plans, but few of them involve leaving scientists in peace in their
universities.' And as Roger still stood in silence, trying to deal with his
sense of loss, Quin put a hand on his arm and said: 'I'll take you to Africa,
Roger, if you can get away. I'd be glad to. It's not strictly your line of
country, but I think you'd enjoy it.'
'Thanks - you know how I'd
love it, but I can't leave Lillian. We're supposed to be taking delivery of an
infant at the end of May, sight unseen. A Canadian dancer who's got into
trouble. Lillian thinks it'll do entrechats as soon as we get it;
she's really thrilled.'
'I'm glad!' said Quin
warmly. 'And if you've got a vacancy for a godfather, perhaps you'd consider
me?'
Roger's face lit up. 'The
job is yours, Professor.' Crossing the courtyard after his talk with Roger,
Quin encountered Verena accompanied by Kenneth Easton, carrying a squash racket
and clearly in the best of spirits.
'You look very fit,' said
Quin when it was evident that she would not let him pass.
'Oh I am, Professor!' said
Verena archly. She did not actually invite him to feel her biceps, but this was
not necessary. Bare-armed and in shorts, the state of her musculature was
evident to anyone with eyes to see. And then: 'I was wondering what you thought
of the Army and Navy Stores? Would you recommend them as the best outfitters
before an expedition?' 'Yes, indeed. They're excellent -I always use them;
you'll find everything you want there. If you mention my name to Mr Collins,
you'll find him very helpful.'
'Thank you, I'll do that.
And flea powder? Do you recommend Coopers or Smythsons?'
Quin, who had vaguely
gathered that Verena was off on some kind of journey with her Croft-Ellis
cousins, came down in favour of Coopers and made his way to his room, leaving
Kenneth in a state of deep depression. The sacrifices he had made for Verena
were considerable. He travelled fourteen stations on the Underground to partner
her in squash; he had stopped saying 'mirror' and 'serviette' both of which, it
seemed, were common, and been corrected when he mispronounced
Featherstonehaugh. And yet every time she saw the Professor, Verena bridled and
simpered like a schoolgirl. There were times, thought Kenneth, when one
wondered if it was all worthwhile.
'I am leaving,' announced
Heini. 'I'm going to look for another room.'
Leonie stared at the
wild-haired youth who had come back in a towering rage after spending Saturday
in town.
'But why, Heini? What has
happened.'
'I can't discuss it, but I
have to leave. I'm too upset to stay here. I can't even play.'
This was not strictly true.
Heini had been home for half an hour and had considerably decreased the life
expectancy of the hired piano by crashing through the Busoni Variations so as
to send the dishes rattling on the sideboard.
'Does Ruth know?' asked
Leonie nervously.
'Not yet. But she will not
be surprised,' said Heini darkly, 'Oh, dear. If you've quarrelled… I mean, that
does happen.'
'Not this,' said Heini
obscurely. 'This does not happen. I'll leave as soon as I've found somewhere to
go.'
Warring emotions clashed in
Leonie's breast. Ruth would be upset and Leonie would do anything to spare her
daughter pain. Yet the thought of Heini being elsewhere rose like an image of
Paradise in her mind. To be able to wander in and out of her sitting room at
will, to be able to put her feet up in the afternoon… To be able to get into
the bathroom!
Not knowing what to say,
she retreated into the kitchen where Mishak was looking at the pages of a
gardening catalogue lent to him by the lady two houses down.
'Heini says he is leaving.
I think he and Ruth have had some dreadful quarrel.'
Mishak looked up. 'Where
will he go?' 'I don't know. He says he's going to look for another room.'
'And how will he pay for
it?'
Heini had, of course, been
living rent-free; the money he had brought from Budapest having been used up
long ago. 'I don't know. But he's very determined.' In Mishak's mind, as in
Leonie's, there rose a vision of Number 27 without Heini. He imagined hearing
the blackbirds in the morning, the rustle of wind in the trees.
'Do you think he'll want
any supper?' asked Leonie, preparing to mix the pancakes which, when filled
with scraps of various sorts, could fill up large numbers of people at very
little expense. 'He was very upset.'
'He will want supper,' said
Mishak, and was proved right. It was Ruth who did not want supper. Ruth who
phoned to say the she would be late… and who was walking the streets wringing
her hands like a Victorian heroine. Ruth who felt disgraced and shamed and
wished the earth would open up and swallow her…
For after all, it had
happened, the thing she had dreaded that night on the Orient Express. It was
prophetic, all the reading she had done there on the Grundlsee. They had not
minced their words, those behavioural experts with their three-volumed tomes:
Havelock Ellis and Krafft-Ebing and a particularly alarming man called Eugene
Feuermann. It was not for nothing that they had devoted chapter after chapter
to one of the great scourges of those who seek fulfilment in the act of love.
Anything would have been
better than what had happened. There were chapters on nymphomania too, but Ruth
would have settled for that. Nymphomania might end badly, but it sounded
generous and giving. Someone with nymphomania might expect to live utterly and
die whereas… Why me? thought Ruth, when I was so much looking forward to being
with him. And what would Janet say? Could one even mention it to Janet who was
so bountiful in the backs of motor cars?
The word drummed in her ear
- the dreaded word which branded her as ice cold, as having splinters in her
heart as if the Snow Queen herself had put them there. It had begun to drizzle
and she pulled up the hood of her loden cape, but the bad weather suited her.
Why should the sun shine ever again on someone who was the subject of two whole
chapters and a set of tables in Feuermann's Sexual Psychopathology?
Ruth walked for one hour,
and two… and then, tainted or not, she made her way to the Underground. Sooner
or later she would have to face Heini and to add cowardice to coldness would
solve nothing.
'Come in.'
Fraulein Lutzenholler sat
in her dressing-gown drinking a cup of cocoa with a wrinkled skin, which she
had made earlier, spilling the milk. Above her hung the portrait of the couch
she had used to see patients in Breslau, a small blue flame hissed in the gas
fire, and she was not at all pleased to see Ruth.
'I am going to bed,' she
announced.
Ruth entered, her hair in
disarray, her eyelids swollen. 'I know; I'm sorry. And I know you can't help me
because I can't pay you and psychoanalysis only works if you pay the person
who's doing it.'
'And in any case I am not
permitted to practise in England,' said Fraulein Lutzenholler firmly.
'But I thought you might
know if there's anything I can do.' It had been difficult to come into the
analyst's uninviting room and after her remarks about the lost papers on the
bus, Ruth had sworn never to consult her again, but it seemed one couldn't
escape one's fate. 'I am so unhappy, you see, and I thought there might be
something I haven't understood about my childhood. Something I have repressed.'
Fraulein Lutzenholler
sighed and put down her cup. 'Is it true that Heini is moving away?' she asked.
Ruth nodded, and something
that was almost a smile passed over the analyst's features, lightening the
moustache on her upper lip.
'It is not so simple,
repression,' she said.
'No. But I know that if you
see something awful when you are small… if your parents… you know if you find
them making love. But I never did. When Papa had his afternoon rest everyone
crept about and my mother sat in the drawing room with her embroidery like a
Grenadier Guard shushing everybody. And anyway our flat had double doors, you
couldn't hear anything. And on the Grundlsee I always fell asleep very quickly
because of all that fresh air and though the maids told me about Frau Pollack
always wanting gherkins before she let her husband come to her, I don't think
it was a trauma and anyway I haven't repressed it. And I can't think - '
Fraulein Lutzenholler
frowned. The good humour caused by the news that Heini was leaving had
evaporated and she was worried about her hot-water bottle. She had filled it
half an hour before and liked to get into bed while it was still in peak
condition.
'What are you talking
about?' she said, spooning the cocoa skin into her mouth. 'I don't understand
you.'
Ruth, who had shied away
from the word all day, now pronounced it.
There was a pause. Fraulein
Lutzenholler looked at the clock. 'Ruth, it is a quarter to eleven. I cannot
discuss this with you now. It is a technical problem and there can be very many
causes; physiological, psychological…'
'Oh, please… please help
me!'
Fraulein Lutzenholler
stifled a yawn
'Very well, tell me what
happened.'
Ruth began to speak. Her
words tumbled over each other, tears sprang to her eyes, her hair fell over her
face and was roughly pushed away.
To these outpourings of a
tortured soul, Fraulein Lutzenholler listened with increasing and evident
displeasure. She put her soiled cup back in its saucer. She frowned.
'Please understand, Ruth,
that technical terms are not there as playthings for amateurs. There is nothing
I can do to help you and I now wish to go to bed.'
'Yes… I'm sorry.'
Ruth wiped her eyes and
rose to go. She had reached the door when Fraulein Lutzenholler uttered - and
in English -a single sentence.
'Per'aps,' she said, 'you
do not lof 'im.'
A few days later, Heini
announced that after all he would stay. His stint of room hunting had shaken
him: rents were exorbitant, there were absurd restrictions on practising and,
of course, no one provided food. With the first round of the competition only
six weeks away, he owed it to everyone to provide himself with the best
conditions for his work. There was also Mantella. Heini's agent had planned an
interview with the press at which Ruth was to be present. If Heini could not
altogether forgive her, he was determined not to harbour a grudge and as the
spring term moved towards Easter, a kind of truce was established in Belsize
Park.
Among Verena's many
excellent qualities could be numbered a thirst for learned gatherings,
especially those with receptions afterwards at which, as the daughter of
Thameside's Vice Chancellor, she was invariably introduced to the participants.
Her reasons for attending a
lecture at the Geophysical Society was, however, rather more personal. The
subject -Cretaceous Volcanism - was one which she was certain would interest
Quin, and seeing the Professor out of hours was now her main objective.
But when she took her seat
in the society's lecture theatre, Quin was nowhere to be seen. Instead, on her
left, was a small, dapper man with a carefully combed moustache and slightly
vulgar two-coloured shoes who introduced himself as Dr Brille-Lamartaine, and
showed a tendency to remain by her side even when she moved through into the
room where drinks and canapes awaited them.
'An excellent lecture, I
think?' said the little man, who turned out to be a Belgian geologist of some
distinction. 'I expected to see Professor Somerville here, but he is not.'
Verena agreed that he was
not, and asked where he had met the Professor.
'I was with 'im in India.
On his last expedition,' said Brille-Lamartaine, taking a glass of wine from
the passing tray but rejecting the canapes, for prawns, in this country, were
always a risk. 'I was instrumental in leading 'im to the caves where we 'ave
made our most important finds.'
He sighed, for Milner, that
morning, had told him something that distressed him deeply.
'How interesting,' said
Verena, who was indeed anxious to hear more. 'Did you enjoy the trip?'
'Yes, yes. Very much. There
were accidents, of course… my spectacles were destroyed .;. and the provisions
were not what I would have expected. But Professor Somerville is a great man…
obstinate… he would not listen to many things I told him, but a great man.
Because I have been on his expedition, they have made me a Fellow of the
Belgian Academy of Sciences. But now he is finished.'
'Finished? What on earth do
you mean?'
'He takes a woman on his next
expedition! A woman to the Kulamali Gorge… one of his students with whom he has
fallen in love. I tell you, this is the end. I will not go with him… I know
what will happen.' He took a second glass of wine and mopped his brow, pursued
by hideous images. A naked woman with loose, lewd hair crawling into the safari
tent… hanging her underwear on the line strung between thorn trees… She would
soon hear of his private fortune and make suggestions: Somerville was known to
be someone who did not wish to marry. 'I have great respect for the Professor,'
he said, draining his glass and drawing closer to Verena who was not at all
like the Lillith of his imagination… who was in fact very like his maiden aunt
in Ghent, 'but this is the end!'
'Wait a minute, Dr Brille-Lamartaine,
are you sure he is taking one of his students? And a woman?'
The Belgian nodded. 'I am
sure. His assistant told me yesterday - he is completely in the Professor's
confidence. The Professor has fallen in love with a girl in his class who is very
high-born and very brilliant. It is a secret because she must not be favoured,
but in June he will declare 'imself. I tell you, women must not go on these
journeys, it is always a disaster, I hav' seen it. There is jealousy, there is
intrigue… and they wear nothing underneath.' He drained his glass and wiped his
brow once more. 'You will say nothing, I know,' he said. 'Oh, there is Sir
Neville Ayillington - you will excuse me?'
'Yes,' said Verena. 'Yes,
indeed.'
She could not wait, now, to
be alone. If any confirmation was needed, this was it! Not that she had really
doubted Quin, but his continuing silence sometimes confused her. But how could
he speak while she was still his student? Only last week a Cambridge professor
had been dismissed because of his involvement with an undergraduate: she had
been foolish all along imagining that Quin could declare himself at this stage.
And she wasn't even going to demand marriage before they sailed. Marriage would
come, of course, when he saw how perfectly they were matched, but she would not
make it a condition.
So now for her First and
for being even fitter - if that was possible - than she had been before!
Frances usually came down
to London only twice a year; in November for her Christmas shopping and in May
for the Chelsea Flower Show.
This year, however, the
wedding of her goddaughter - the niece of Lydia Barchester who had come to
grief when retreating backwards from Their Majesties - brought her to London at
the end of March. She came under protest, as the result of fierce bullying by
Martha who had decreed that she needed a new dress and, in particular, new
shoes.
'Nonsense,' said Frances.
'I bought some shoes for the Godchester christening.'
'That was twelve years
ago,' said Martha.
Frances detested buying anything
for her personal adorn-ment, but if it had to be done then it had to be done at
Fortnum's in Piccadilly. Displeased, she took Martha's shopping list and headed
south with Harris in the Buick. Beside her on the seat was a cardboard box
padded with wood shavings and containing a dozen dark brown bulbs which, after
some hesitation, she had dug out of her garden on the previous day.
When in London, Frances did
not stay with Quin, whose flat she regarded as faintly disreputable and liable
to yield French actresses or dancing girls. She dined with him, but she stayed
at Brown's Hotel where nothing ever changed, and sent Harris to his married
sister in Peckham.
Her day had been carefully
planned, yet when she found Harris waiting the next morning with the car, the
instructions she gave him surprised even herself.
'Take me to Number 27
Belsize Close,' she said.
Harris raised his eyebrows.
'That's Hampstead, isn't it?'
'Nearly. It's off
Haverstock Hill.' ;
Now why? thought Frances,
already regretting her impulse. She was seeing Quin that evening - why not give
the bulbs to him to pass on to Ruth?
The streets as they drove
north became meaner, shabbier, and as Harris stopped to ask the way, they were
given instructions by a gesticulating, scarcely comprehensible foreigner in a
large black hat.
Number 27 was all that she
had feared; a dilapidated lodging house, the door unpainted, the wood sagging
in the window frames. A cat foraged in the dustbins; the paving stones were
cracked.
'I won't be long,' she told
Harris, and made her way up the steps.
Leonie, enjoying the calm
of her sitting room, for Heini had gone to see his agent, heard the bell, went
downstairs and saw an unknown, gaunt lady in dark purple tweeds, and behind her
an unmistakably expensive, though ancient, motor car with a uniformed
chauffeur.
'I can help you?' said
Leonie - and then: 'Are you perhaps the aunt of Professor Somerville?' .
'Good heavens, woman, how
did you know?'
'There is a look… and Ruth
has spoken of you. Please come in.' Then, with the sudden panic which assails
women the world over at an unexpected apparition: 'There is nothing wrong at
the university? All is well with the Professor… and with Ruth?'
'Yes, yes,' said Miss
Somerville impatiently, wondering again why she had come. The house was
appalling: the worn lino, the smell of cheap disinfectant… 'I brought some
bulbs for your uncle. You are Mrs Berger, I take it? Ruth mentioned that he
liked autumn crocus and I have more than I know what to do with. Would you
please give them to him?'
'For Mishak?' Leonie's face
lit up. 'Oh, he will be so pleased! He is in the garden now, you must of course
take them yourself- he will want to thank you. And I will make us a cup of
coffee. No; tea, of course… I forget!'
'No, thank you. I won't
stay.'
'But you must! First I will
show you the garden… it is best to go through the house because the side door
is stuck.'
Frances followed her
reluctantly. Now it was going to be impossible to get out of an invitation to
drink tea. Foreigners could never make it properly and she would probably be
expected to eat something sickly with a spoon.
Mishak was digging his
potato patch - and as he straightened and turned towards them, Frances was
gripped by a fierce, an overwhelming disappointment.
I have come to fetch you, he had said to
Marianne, opening his briefcase, lifting his hat, and she had imagined a dapper
little man in an expensive overcoat, a man of the world. But this was an old
refugee, a foreigner in a crumpled jacket and cloth cap, shabby and poor and strange.
It was all she could do to force herself to approach him.
Leonie explained their
errand and Mishak leant his spade against the fence.
'Autumn crocus?' he said.
'Ruth told me how they grow under the cherry tree.'
He took the box, pushed
aside the shavings. His hands, as he searched for the bulbs, were
earth-stained, square and stumpy-fingered. Hands that planted and mended, that
hammered and turned screws. Not really foreign; not really strange…
'Yes,' said Mishak,
touching a bulb. 'How I remember them!' He didn't even thank her; he only
smiled.
The tea was excellent, but
Frances could not stay.
'I have to shop,' she said
wearily.
Leonie's eyes lit up.
'Where do you go?'
'Fortnum's in Piccadilly.'
'Ah, that is a wonderful
place,' said Leonie wistfully. 'You buy a dress?'
Frances nodded. 'And
shoes.'
'What kind of shoes?' It
was Mishak who spoke, and Frances glared at him as shocked as if it was a tree
which had dared to interest itself in her concerns.
'The same as I always buy,'
she said testily. 'Brown strap shoes with a side button and low heel.'
'No,' said Mishak.
'I beg your
pardon?' Frances was unable to believe her ears.
'Not strap shoes. Not low
heels. Not buttons,' said Mishak. 'Fortunati pumps with a Cuban heel, in kid.
From the Milan workshops; they use a different last.'
Leonie nodded. 'He knows.
He worked for many years in my father's department store.'
Frances was in no way
appeased. 'Certainly not! I wouldn't dream of it. I've had the same shoes for
years and I haven't the slightest intention of changing now.'
'You have a high arch; it
is a gift,' said Mishak. He felt in his pocket for his pipe, remembered that it
was filled with the stumps of cigars which Ziller brought from the Hungarian
restaurant, and abandoned it. ;
'Anyway, no one sees what I
wear up there,' said Frances, still glowering. 'God sees,' said Mishak.
Ruth, coming in late from
the university, heard about Miss Somerville's visit and was instantly
transformed.
'Oh, what did she say? Tell
me, Mishak - tell me everything she said! Did she talk about the garden?' ;
'Yes, she did. They've had
a hard winter, but the alpine gentians are almost out, and the magnolias.'
'What about glassing in
that bit of the south wall by the sundial? Is she going to do it? She wanted to
see if she could grow a lapageria so far north - everyone said she couldn't and
you can imagine the effect that had on her!'
'I believe she means to;
yes.'
He exchanged a glance with
Leonie. They had not seen Ruth look like this for weeks.
'Oh, Mishak, it was so beautiful
up there, you can't believe it! It's so clean and everything has its
own smell, completely distinct, and the air keeps moving and moving. There must
be more air there than anywhere in the world! Did she tell you whether Elsie
has got on to the WEA course in Botany?'
'No, she didn't. Who is
Elsie?'
'She's the housemaid. She's
really interested in plants and so nice! And what about Mrs Ridley's
grandmother - I told you about her - she was going to be a hundred in
February.' She looked up, suddenly afraid. 'She's still alive, isn't she? She must
be - she was so looking forward to her telegram from the King.'
'We didn't speak of her
either,' said Mishak.
'I suppose the lambs will
just be being born - John Ridley said the end of March. They're like sheep in
the bible up there, so clean, and you can hear them cropping the turf… And it's
full of rock roses; and the birds…' She shook her head, but it wouldn't go
away; sometimes she thought it would never go away, the vision of blond grass
and blue sky and the white horses of the sea.
'But she told me about the
little dog,' said Mishak. 'She's keeping it and they're calling it Daniel. She
said I should tell you and you would understand.'
'Daniel? Oh, yes - of
course.' So Miss Somerville had not betrayed her foolishness on the journey to
the Fames. 'After Wagner's stepdaughter - you know, Cosima von Billow's
daughter, Daniella, only it's a male, of course. Yes, that's good! He looks
like a Daniel - God help any lions if he gets into their den; he's really
fierce!'
Leonie, who had been
listening to this conversation with increasing puzzlement now said: 'But, Ruth,
you see Professor Somerville every day. Why don't you ask him about these
things yourself? Whether the old grandmother is dead or the lambs are born? He must
know.' ;
Ruth flushed. 'I wouldn't
talk to him about Bowmont; it's none of my business - and anyway he's always
working; he's incredibly busy this term.'
Busy and abstracted and not
at all friendly… And there were rumours that he was leaving.
She took out her lecture
notes, but before she could settle down to work, the door opened and Heini came
in. It was a quarter to ten, too late to practise without incurring the wrath
of Fraulein Lutzenholler and he now went to sit disconsolately on the sofa,
avoiding Ruth's eyes. It was a fortnight since the meeting in Janet's flat and
he had still not forgiven her properly, but as she pushed back her notes and
went to make him a cup of cocoa, Ruth understood what she had to do. For it was
not only Mishak and Leonie who had learnt something from Miss Somerville's
visit. Ruth herself had obtained rather more insight into her own mind than she
cared for - and now it was necessary to act.
And this meant changing the
way she had been thinking. It meant repudiating her goat-herding grandmother
and the consolations of her mother's Catholic faith. It meant saying goodbye to
the Baby Jesus in his crib and the consoling angels with their feathered wings,
and calling on her other heritage: the stern, ancient and mysterious Jewish
faith where the word of the rabbis was law and it was the God of the Ten
Commandments and not of the Sermon on the Mount who reigned supreme. It was
there that she would be cured of her disability and find her way back to Heini.
She had not quite wanted to admit kinship with those black-bearded, shut-off
figures in their skull caps… the Hassidim wandering poverty-stricken through
Polish forests, the thirteen-year-old boys who studied and chanted like old
men, ruining their eyes. Yet it was in the traditions of just those people that
she would find deliverance.
The laws of England had
failed her - or she, with her carelessness had failed them. Mr Proudfoot could
not give Heini what he needed, but there were other and older laws she could
evoke.
It would take courage - a
great deal of courage - but she knew now what she had to do.
She tried not to run… tried
to keep to a decorous walk, but it was impossible because she had to
get there quickly. To Quin's flat while her resolution held… to Quin who even
now might save her.
She was beside the river,
on a path between the Thames and the road with its busy end-of-the-day traffic.
The lamps had just been lit, their reflections shone on the water, for the tide
was high and the current raced out towards the sea.
'Oh, God, let him be in,'
she prayed. 'Let him be in and alone!'
But what right had she to
pray? She wasn't even a proper sinner who was entitled to the Almighty's ear;
she was a cold rejective failure. God hated the mean in spirit, she was sure of
that. Or would he have understood about Krafft-Ebing and Havelock Ellis and the
terrifying Eugene Feuermann? Would he think of her as simply ill and heed her
after all?
It had been raining ever
since she came out of the Underground; fine, slanting rain which soaked through
her loden cape. Leonie had taken the hood off for relining; the cloak was
dreadfully shabby, and her hair too was sodden. Not that that mattered -
perhaps the rain would wash her clean once more.
A street sign opposite said
Cheyne Walk, and she saw the crescent of Regency houses and the shapes of the
fine trees in the gardens.
'Henry the Eighth had a
palace there,' Quin had told her in Vienna, talking about his London home. 'You
can see a mulberry from my window that's supposed to have been planted by
Elizabeth the First. Not likely, but a nice idea.'
All the trees in the
gardens of the tall houses looked as though they might have been planted by a
queen. There were streaks of orange and amethyst still in the west, and turning
she could see the necklace of lights on the Albert Bridge. It was a beautiful
street. Well, of course. Quin was rich, he could live where he liked whereas
she and Heini had had to make do with Janet's flat. Perhaps that was why it had
all gone so wrong.
But it was no good blaming
anyone. The fault lay in herself. Only not entirely, perhaps. If Quin would
only do what she asked it might still come right.
She was passing the
wrought-iron gates of the houses now; the elegant carriage lamps, and the
graceful fan windows which sent semicircles of light out onto the steps. There
was no need to peer at house numbers. She had seen the Crossley at once, parked
outside the door. Best to get it over then - and she walked resolutely up to
the door and rang the bell.
Quin put down his pen,
frowning. He had counted on a couple of hours' work before dinner. It was
Lockwood's weekend off; he'd taken the phone off the hook and planned to finish
his paper for the museum journal.
'Good God! Ruth!' And
seeing her face, 'What is it?' Are you in trouble?'
She shook out her hair like
a dog and followed him upstairs. 'Yes, I am. I'm in very serious trouble.' She
spoke in her native language, her words gaining an extra and metaphysical
weight.
'Come in and get warm.'
He took the sodden cloak
from her shoulders and led her into the drawing room, but though the curtains
were drawn back, she did not go to the window, nor to the grate where a bright
fire was burning. Instead she held out her hands to him, the palms upwards in
the age-old gesture of beseech-ment.
'I can't stay. I just want
you to do something for me. Something terribly important.'
'What is it, my dear? Just
tell me.'
Her head went up. Her
entreating eyes held his.
'I want you to divorce me.
Completely and absolutely. This minute. Now.'
There was a pause. Then
Quin, schooling his expression, said carefully: 'I will, of course, do anything
I can to help you. But I'm not quite clear how I can divorce you now.
Dick Proudfoot is doing -'
'No!' she interrupted.
'It's nothing to do with Mr Proud-foot and documents and things. It's much more
fundamental than that. It's to do with undoing a curse.'
'I beg your pardon?'
'I'm sorry. I don't mean
that our wedding was a curse. But I knew when we said those words before
witnesses… I mean, you might think if someone has bunions and cuts the sides
out of their slippers it wouldn't feel like a wedding, but bunions can't stop
oaths from mattering. So you have to absolve me and I know how you can do it
because I asked Mrs Weiss. She wasn't good about Hanukkah, but she knew about
divorce and so did Paul Ziller, and anyway I knew before that. All you have to
do is say "I divorce you, I divorce you, I divorce you", three times.
With your hand on my shoulder, I think, but I'm not sure about that. It's an
old Jewish law, truly, and it dissolves the marriage then and there. You should
say it in front of a rabbi, but just saying it and really meaning it is what
counts. Really repudiating me and wanting to be free. Only you have to
say it - the man - because the old Jews were like that; it was the men who
counted. And I know if you did it, things would get better. They might even be
all right.' '
She subsided, running out
of breath, and as Quin was silent: 'You will do it, won't you?' she begged. 'If
you said "I divorce thee" it might be better. More biblical'
And as Quin moved towards the door, she added anxiously: 'Where are you going?'
Quin did not answer. She
heard him cross the landing; then he came back carrying a large white towel.
'Come here,' he ordered.
'Sit down on the sofa. Next to the fire.' '..
She came, puzzled but
obedient, and sat down.
'What are you going to do?'
'Bend your head.' ;
'But -'
'You came to your wedding
with wet hair. At least you can come to your divorce with it dry.'
As he spoke he began to
towel her hair - but this was not what she wanted. This was not right. There
was nothing in Old Testamental lore about having your hair dried by a husband
who was putting you away and she tried to pull back, but it wasn't like that.
It was very peaceful and his hands…
But as he moved away from
her scalp and down to the loose hair on her shoulders she became angry. For she
could see his hands now and they had been a trouble to her from the
start. When she was five years old, her father had brought back a book of
Donatello sculptures from Italy and one night when she wasn't well, he had
shown her the plates.
'A person can't have made
that,' she had said, sitting on his knee. 'It's too beautiful. It must have
come from a shop.'
It was the left hand of
John the Baptist she had been looking at: the long fingers, one crooked to hold
a scroll in place, the sinewy line leading to the wrist.
Now it was all going on
again as Quin towelled her hair… as it had gone on in the museum when he helped
her sort the cave bear bones… on the Orient Express when he cracked a walnut
and laid it on her plate… and endlessly when he jabbed, poked at, emptied and
almost never lit his pipe.
'No, please, you must stop.'
She put up her arm to seize his wrist, but that was a mistake. Quite a big one
really.
Quin folded the towel,
carried it out of the room, and returned with a small glass containing a liquid
the colour of a Stradivarius.
'Now,' he said. 'Drink
this. It'll warm you. And then tell me very quietly what all this is about.'
Ruth took the glass,
sniffed, drained the Grand Armagnac. A small 'Oh!' of appreciation escaped her.
She repressed it, called on her resources.
'What it is about,' she
said, putting up her chin, 'is… frigidity.'
Quin's expression did not
change. Only his eyebrows rose a fraction as he waited.
'Proper, awful, medical
frigidity, like in a book. Like I was reading about on the Grundlsee. Like in
Havelock Ellis and Krafft-Ebing and Eugene Feuermann. I must have had a
premonition because why would I read about it when I could have been reading Heidi
or What Katy Did?'
'One does wonder,' murmured
Quin.
'I think I've always
dreaded it most of all. Being cold. Not responding. Lying there like a log.'
'Is that what you did?'
Now his expression had
changed; the nails bit into his palm, but Ruth was looking at the floor.
'Not exactly, because I
didn't lie. But effectively.'
'This is Heini, I suppose?
That is what we are talking about?'
Ruth nodded. 'I told you
Heini had changed his mind about Chopin and the etudes and he is preparing for
this very important competition and he is going to play Lizst's Dante Sonata
which is all about the Eternal Feminine and he wanted… love. He said so on
Christmas Eve and it was very moving. And when I left the annulment papers on
the bus, it didn't seem any good waiting till we could be married, so I
arranged everything and Janet was very helpful and lent us her flat. She even
gave me a bottle of wine -it was a Liebfraumilch from the Co-op, but it didn't
taste like the wine we had on the Orient Express.'
'No,' said Quin gravely.
'It wouldn't do. I have to say that Liebfraumilch from the Co-op might make
anyone frigid.'
But to speak lightly was an
effort. He wanted to strangle Heini slowly and with his bare hands.
'Oh, please, it isn't
funny! It's a frightful condition. Krafft-Ebing says the causes are often
psychological, but how could I ever afford to find out what awful thing I saw
my parents do - and Fraulein Lutzenholler is a dreadful woman. She's supposed
to be a professional and all she can do is drink cocoa with the skin on and
babble about love. And if it's physical that's worse because you know
how complicated the nervous system is and I don't want to have operations.'
Quin had mastered himself.
'Look, Ruth, the first time people make love is often a disaster. It's a thing
that has to be learnt and - '
'Yes but how can
it be? How can it be learnt if people are so frigid that there never is
a first time? If they take their sweater off and then put it on again and run
away down the fire escape? How can they ever get it right when they don't even do
it?'
Quin rose and went to the
window. It struck him that the view was the most beautiful, possibly, in the
world, and that he must be careful not to smile. 'You mean you never got as far
as making love at all?'
'No. And it's so awful
because Heini took such trouble getting the contraception things from the
machine and getting cream chocolate instead and then I rushed out into the
night like a frightened hen. He's scarcely spoken to me since and you can't
blame him.'
Quin came back and sat down
beside her on the sofa. 'And why do you think me saying "I divorce
you" three times would make it better?'
Ruth looked at her empty
glass, then down at the carpet. 'You see, I want to be liberated and giving
and, of course, I love Heini very much. But my family… it's difficult to get
away from one's upbringing and they are old-fashioned and marriage has
always been… marriage. Even ones like ours that aren't proper ones. And I
thought, maybe it isn't just my nervous system being deformed or having seen
something horrible in a haystack on the Grundlsee. Maybe some part of me is
going to go on running down fire escapes till I'm un-married. Which is
why I want you please to do this thing now. It's perfectly valid, I promise
you.' She looked about her and her eyes rested on two silver candlesticks on
the mantelpiece. 'We could light some candles,' she said, 'that would make it
more solemn.'
'So we could,' he said. He
got up, carried the fluted candlesticks to the low table, lit a match.
'Now,' he said.
She turned to him. 'Now
you're going to do it?' she asked breathlessly.
'Well, no,' he said
apologetically. 'What I'm going to do now is not exactly that. What I'm going
to do now, is kiss you.'
'Oh, God - you mustn't go
away! I shall die at once if you leave me.'
He turned to where she lay
beside him on the pillow. The window framed the night sky and the
constellations named for the heroines of legend: Andromeda, the Pleiades… She
belonged in their company now, this gallant girl who had taken her first
journey into love.
'I was going to get us
something to eat,' he said. 'It's nearly midnight. You must be starving.' He
ran his fingers down the curve of her cheek, her throat; gathered a handful of
her tresses. 'I am looped in the loops of her hair' he murmured, his
face in the hollow of her shoulder.
'Miss Kenmore didn't teach
me that,' said Ruth, not pleased with this gap in her education.
'No. We have rather moved
out of Kenmore country.'
A long way out of it. He
had evidently decided against killing her by getting out of bed and as she
folded herself against him, she realized that she must be careful not actually
to become him, which would be impractical. Then suddenly she drew
away.
'Quin, something terrible
has happened! I haven't had my tristesse!' She gazed at him, her eyes
huge. 'You know, the thing you have afterwards. Total despair. Postcoital
tristesse, it's called. It's in all the books! It's when you realize that
in spite of everything, every human soul is tragically and hopelessly alone,
and I don't feel it at all; I feel absolutely marvellous. I told you I
wasn't like other people.'
'No,' he said rather
shakily. 'You're not in the least like other people. If you were, all the gods
would come down from Olympus and proclaim Paradise on Earth.' And presently.
'We'll eat later.'
But later, quite suddenly,
he fell asleep and she followed him into his imagined dreams as he twitched,
chased into a Utrillo landscape of rich green trees and hounds and huntsmen in
scarlet - and she vowed to keep awake because she must miss nothing of this
night, not one instant… but she did sleep in the end, briefly, and woke up in
wonderment because she understood now what people meant when they said: 'She
slept with him.' That it was part of the act of love, this sharing of oblivion.
When he too woke it was
suddenly and with contrition. 'Now you shall eat, my poor love,' he
said, and they went into the kitchen hand in hand because she wasn't prepared
to be separated from him even for as long as it took to cross the hallway, and
had a picnic of bread and cheese and a wine that was not very much like the
Liebfraumilch that she had drunk in Janet's flat.
'Oh, I'm so hungry,'
said Ruth, and she seemed to be tasting food for the first time. And pausing
with a hunk of Emmentaler in her hand: 'Do you think it will come later, the tristesse?
The terrible, tragic hopelessness - the feeling that everyone is really alone?'
'I am not alone,' said
Quin, coming round behind her, holding her. 'And nor are you. We shall never be
alone again.'
When they had eaten, they
opened the French windows and stood looking out at the sleeping city and the
river which never slept. Wrapped in Quin's dressing-gown, feeling his warmth
beside her, she took great breaths of the night air.
''Sweet Thames run softly
till I end my song,' she quoted. 'I may not know improper poems about
people's hair, but Miss Ken-more taught me a lot of Spenser. I love it
so much, this river.'
'I too,' said Quin. 'As a
matter of fact I think I might go in for some bottle-throwing on my own
account. I shall go out tomorrow and buy a thousand lemonade bottles and put a
note in each and every one and drop them from the bridge.'
'What will they say, the
notes? What will you put in them?'
He turned his head,
surprised at her obtuseness. 'Your name, of course. What else?'
Hand in hand, still, they
wandered back to bed. 'It's strange,' said Ruth. 'I thought love would be like
the slow movement of the Mozart Sinfonia Concertante… or like one of those
uplifting paintings my mother used to take me to look at with putti and clouds
and golden rays… or even like the sea. But it isn't, is it?'
'No. Love is like itself.'
'Yes.' She sighed… curled
herself, warm and relaxed and pliant against his side.
But when presently she
indicated that in spite of her deep frigidity and the tristesse which
she expected at any moment, she was, so to speak, there, and he
gathered her into his arms, he did not use any of the endearments in either of
the languages which they spoke.
Clearly and quietly in the
darkness, Quin said: 'My wife.'
He had dropped Ruth off at
the corner of her street soon after it was light. Now, punctually at nine
o'clock, he parked the Crossley outside the elegant premises of Cavour and
Stattersley, Jewellers, since 1763, to His Majesty the King, and made his way
up the steps.
It had come to him unbidden
- this uncharacteristic desire to buy her a present that was sumptuous beyond
reason; a useless, costly gift that would blazen his love to the skies.
Uncharacteristic because there was no such tradition at Bowmont - no family
tiara stowed in the bank and brought out for high days and holidays; no
Somerville parure handed down through the generations. His grandmother
had kept her Quaker faith and her Quaker ways; Aunt Frances possessed one cameo
brooch which appeared, listing slightly, on the black chenille on New Year's
Eve.
But now for Ruth - for his
newly discovered wife - he wanted to make a gesture that would resound through
the coming generations, a proclamation! The times were against it, his
conscience too: as he passed through the wide doors held open by a flunkey, the
orphans of Abyssinia, the unemployed, stretched out imaginary hands to him, but
to no avail. Later they would be sensible, he and Ruth: they would plough and
sow and make rights of way; they would sponsor yet more opera-loving cowmen,
but now, instantly, he would send a priceless, senseless gift to his beloved,
and she would rise from her bed and know!
Thus Quin, walking lightly
up the steps between the little box trees in tubs - and Mr Cavour, seeing him
coming, metaphorically licked his lips.
'What had you in mind?' he
asked when Quin had been shown to a blue velvet chair beside a rosewood desk.
In the show cases, lit like treasures of The Hermitage, were Faberge Easter
eggs; earrings trembling with showers of crystal, a butterfly brooch worn by
the exiled Spanish Queen. 'What kind of gems, for example?'
Quin smiled, aware that he
was cutting a slightly absurd figure: a man willing to mortgage himself for a
gift with only the haziest notions of its nature. What gems did he
have in mind? Diamonds? Sinbad had found a valley filled with them; they were
lodged in the brains of serpents and carried aloft in eagle's bills. The Orlov
diamond had been plucked from the eye of an Indian idol… the Great Mogul, the
most famous jewel in antiquity, was the favourite treasure of Shah Jahan.
Were diamonds right for
Ruth, with her warmth, her snub nose and funniness? Was there too much ice
there for his new-found wife?
'Or we have a ruby parure?
said Mr Cavour. 'The stones are from the Mogok mines; unmatchable. The true
pigeon's blood colour. They were sold to an American by the Grand Duchess
Tromatoff and they're just back on the market.'
Quin pondered. Mogok, near
Mandalay… paddy fields… temples… He had been there, making a detour after an
earlier expedition and had seen the mines. Why not rubies with their inner
fire?
'And there is a pearl and
sapphire necklace which you would be hard put to match anywhere in the world.
Someone is interested in it, but if you wished to make a definite offer…' He
flicked at an underling. 'Go on down to the safe, Ted, and get Number 509.'
Quin's mind was still in
free fall, pursuing he knew not what. The Profane Venus was always painted
richly dressed in a fillet of pearls. It was the Celestial Venus that they
painted naked, for they knew, those wise men of the Renaissance, that nakedness
was pure. Either was all right with him: Ruth in her loden cape, loaded with
jewels; Ruth without it at midnight, eating a peach.
The box was brought,
snapped open. The necklace was superb.
'Yes… it's very beautiful,'
said Quin absently. '
Then suddenly it came, the
clue, the allusion… the thing he had been waiting for: Ruth, barefoot with
windblown hair, coming towards him on Bowmont beach, cupping something in her
hand. 'Look,' she was saying, 'Oh, look!
He rose, waved away the
necklace. 'It's all right,' he said. 'I know now what it has to be. I know
exactly!'
His next errand did not
take him long.
Dick Proudfoot had returned
from Madeira, suntanned and pleased with life. He had also produced four
watercolours of which only three displeased him. Now, however, he looked down
at the complicated document, with its seals and tassels - a replica of the
first which his clerk had brought in when Professor Somerville appeared
unexpectedly in the office — and up again at Quin.
""What
did you say?'
'You heard me! I want you
to tear the thing up. I'm stopping the annulment. I'm staying married.'
Proudfoot leaned back in
his chair and folded his hands behind his head.
'Well, well. I can't say
I'm surprised.' He grinned. 'Allow me to congratulate you.'
It struck him that he had
not seen Quin look so relaxed and happy for a long time. The volcanic craters
were missing; there was peace in those alert, enquiring eyes. Proudfoot pulled
the document towards him, tore it in two, dropped it in the wastepaper basket.
'Quite apart from anything else, it's a great relief- we were on pretty dodgy
ground all along. Will you be living at Bowmont?'
'Yes. She fits the place
like a glove - she was only there a few days, yet everyone remembers her: the
shepherd, the housemaids… it's uncanny!' For a moment, a slight shadow fell
over his face. 'The trouble is, I've set up this trip to Africa.'
But even as he spoke, Quin
realized what he would do. The climate on the plains was healthy; the trip was
not hazardous — and in an emergency Ruth could always stay with the Commissioner
and his wife at Lindi.
'Do you want me to write to
Ruth?'
'No; I'll tell her myself.
And thanks, Dick, you've been splendid. If you send your account to Chelsea
I'll settle it before I go.'
He had reached the door
when Proudfoot called him back. 'Have you got a minute?'
Though he was impatient to
be gone, Quin nodded. Dick went to a bureau by the wall, opened a drawer, took
out a small painting: a feathery tamarisk, each brush stroke as light as
gossamer, against a mass of scarlet geraniums.
'I did it in Madeira. Do
you think she'd like it? Ruth?'
'I'm sure she would.'
'I'll get it framed then
and send it along.'
Out in the street, Quin
looked at his watch. Ruth should have received his gift by now - Cavour had
promised to send it instantly. Light-headed from lack of sleep and the
conviction that he would live for ever, he turned his car towards the museum.
It shouldn't be difficult to book an extra cabin on the boat, but he'd better
put Milner on to it right away. And how very agreeable to know that Brille-Lamartaine,
if he chose to make further enquiries, would learn nothing but the truth. For
he was taking along a woman, one of his own students… and one with
whom he was passionately in love!
Ruth had not expected to go
to sleep after she left Quin. She had crept in and climbed into her bed only
wanting to relive the whole glorious night again, but she had fallen instantly
into deep oblivion.
Now, as she woke and
stretched, it was to a transformed world. The bedroom she shared with her Aunt
Hilda, with its swirling brown wallpaper, had never seemed to be a place in
which to let the eye linger, but now she could imagine the pleasure the
designer must have felt in being allowed to wiggle paint about. And Hilda
herself, as she brushed her sparse hair, seemed to Ruth the personification of
the academic ideal - devoted all her life to a tribe she never saw, made
ecstatic by a chipped arrowhead or drinking cup. How good Aunt Hilda was, how
grateful Ruth was to be her niece!
She swung her feet over the
side of the bed, smiled at the shrunken head. She was walking now over the
buried biscuit tin containing her wedding ring, her marriage certificate. Soon
- today perhaps - she could dig it up and take it to her mother.
'I'm married, Mama,' she
would say. 'I'm married to Professor Somerville and I love him terribly and he
loves me.'
She slipped on her
dressing-gown and went to the window and here too was a beauty she had never
perceived before. True, the gasometer was still there, but so was the sycamore
in the next-door garden and, yes, the bark was sooty and one of the branches
was dead - but oh, the glory of the brave new leaves!
On the landing she
encountered Fraulein Lutzenholler, glowering, with her sponge bag.
'He is in the bathroom,'
she said.
There was no need for Ruth
to ask who. It was always Heini who was in the bathroom. But this morning she
did not rush to Heini's defence, she was too busy loving Fraulein Lutzenholler
who had been so right about everything: who had said that we lose what we want
to lose, forget what we want to forget… who had said that frigidity was about
whether you loved someone or not. Ruth, in her dramatic nonfrigidity, beamed at
the psychoanalyst and would have kissed her but for the moustache and the
knowledge that, so early in the morning, she could not yet have cleaned her
teeth.
'Hurry up, Heini,' called
Ruth.
The thought of Heini did
halt her. Heini was going to be badly hurt and for a moment her joy was clouded
by apprehension. But only for a moment. Heini would find another starling - a
whole flock of them in years to come. It was music he loved, and rightly - and
what had happened last night was beyond anything one could be sorry for. It was
a kind of metallurgical process, a welding of body and soul; you couldn't argue
about it.
Oh, Quin, she
thought, and hugged herself, and Fraulein Lutzenholler, furiously waiting,
looked at her, startled, re-membering the existence of something she seldom
came across in her profession: joy. ,
Giving up hope of the
bathroom, Ruth went into the kitchen where all of them, since Heini's arrival,
kept a spare toothbrush. Her mother was laying the breakfast and Ruth stood for
a moment in the doorway watching her. Leonie looked tired these days, there
were lines on her face that had not been there when they left Vienna, and
strands of grey in her hair, but to her daughter she looked beautiful. And with
the love that enveloped Ruth, with the ecstasy of her remembered night, there
came an overwhelming gratitude, for now she would be able to help her parents,
help Uncle Mishak… pay back at last.
Her mother would not want
to live at Bowmont —.Ruth smiled, thinking of the surging sea, the cold wind,
the draughts. Her parents would visit, but they would want to stay in town and
now they should do so in comfort. She would be an undemanding wife - no grand
clothes, certainly no jewels or trinkets which she did not care for anyway. She
would learn to be frugal and sensible, but there were things she would ask Quin
for and that he would grant in their shared life, she knew that. A cottage for
Uncle Mishak -Elsie had shown her an empty one in the village - sanctuary for
her friends when they needed a place to rest or work… and she might just
mention the problem of the sheep! And she, in exchange, would not whine to be
taken on his journeys. It was not easy to see how she was supposed to live away
from him for months on end, but she would - somehow she would.
Now she embraced her mother
who said: 'You look very happy. Did you have a good time with Pilly?'
'Yes, I did. A lovely
time.' :
Ruth blushed, but it was
her last lie. They had nor made plans in the night - it was a night outside
time - but when they did she would announce her marriage and then she would
never need to lie again!
It was as she was cutting
herself a slice of bread that she came out of her dream of happiness to notice
that Leonie was clattering the crockery in a way which had boded ill in Vienna.
'Is anything the matter,
Mama?'
Leonie shrugged. 'I'm silly
to be surprised -I should have expected it from the stupid, pop-eyed Aryan cow!
But even so one couldn't quite imagine that she would treat him like that after
all he did for her and that loutish family of hers. When you think how she
chased him in the hospital - a junior nurse as thick as a plank - and the way
she showed off about being a Frau Doktor.'
'Is this Hennie? Dr Levy's
wife?'
Leonie nodded. 'She's
written to say she wants a divorce on racial grounds. You should have seen him
yesterday; he looks ten years older - and even so he won't hear a word against
her. The man's a saint.'
Ruth was silent, cupping
her hands round her mug, in sudden need of warmth. How could anyone hurt this
modest, gentle man - a brilliant doctor, a generous friend. She had seemed to
love him, the foolish Hennie, echoing his words, basking in his status. Was it
so strong, the pull of her family with their pernicious views?
'Aren't you going to
college?'
'Not till later.'
Quin had told her to be
lazy, to have the morning off. It had surprised her, but she would heed him. When
she did go, she would have to be careful not to levitate in the lecture room
and float over the carafe of water into his arms. Levitating during lectures
was almost certainly bad manners and she could only repay the gods now by being
very, very good.
She was still sitting
dreamily over a second cup of coffee when the doorbell rang, insistent and
shrill. For a moment she thought it might be Quin and in an unconscious gesture
of coquetry, she shook out her hair, making it into an offering. But that was silly;
Quin had left her saying he had something important to do. He had sounded
mysterious, almost preoccupied. He wouldn't, in any case, have followed her to
Belsize Park - not till they had decided what to do.
'Go down, darling,' said
Leonie. 'Ziller's out - he's gone to the Day Centre.' She brightened. 'Perhaps
it's the rodent officer!'
But it was not the rodent
officer. A messenger stood there in a dark blue pageboy's suit and a peaked
cap. He must have come in the van that stood parked near by, also dark blue,
with scrolled writing saying Cavour and Stattersley and surmounted by
a crown.
'I've a package for Miss
Ruth Berger. It's got to be delivered to her personally.'
'I'm Ruth Berger.'
'Can you give evidence of
identity?’
Ruth, in her dressing-gown,
sighed. 'I can go up and get a letter or something. But I'm not expecting
anything. Are you sure it's for me?'
'Yes, I'm sure. It's a
special delivery. Got to be handed over personally and had to get here first
thing - and came in an armoured car, and that only happens when we're
delivering stuff that's worth a fortune!'
'I think you must have got
it wrong,' said Ruth, puzzled.
But the driver now leant
out of the van and said: 'It's okay, I've got a description. You can hand it
over - just get her to sign.'
Ruth took the parcel and
signed her name. The delivery boy looked at her, impressed. 'We haven't had to
hustle like that since we delivered a tiara to the Duchess of Rockingham before
the state visit of some bigwig. I wish it was me going to open the box.'
Ruth, still bewildered,
said: 'I'm sorry, I don't have anything to give you — but thank you all the
same. Only if there's a mistake… ?'
If there is, just get in
touch with Cavour and Stattersley. They can change it for you maybe… shorten it
or something. But you won't want to mess about with what you've got in there!'
The van drove away. Left
alone, Ruth opened the box. She didn't, at first, take in what she saw: a
necklace of green stones, each ringed by diamonds and linked by a golden chain.
Emeralds, green as the sea, as the eyes of the Buddha and perfectly matched.
Then suddenly she
understood.
This was a gift… a gift
hurried to her through the London streets so that it should reach her the
morning after the bridal night. Obscenely valuable, because Quin was generous
and would not buy her off with anything cheap, but unmistakable in what it
signified.
'The word comes from the
Latin matrimonium ad morganaticum,' Quin had told her in the
Stadtpark, explaining the concept of a morganatic marriage. 'It's a marriage
based on the morning gift with which the husband frees himself from any
liability to his wife. A morganatic wife doesn't share any of her husband's
duties or responsibilities, and their children don't inherit.'
That was why he had urged
her to stay home this morning; so that she would be certain to receive it. So
that she should understand at once that she was not wanted at Bowmont. A girl
with tainted blood might be fit to share his bed, but not his home. A refugee,
a foreigner, part Jewish… of course, it was unthinkable. If it could happen to
Dr Levy, that saintly man, then why not to her?
She shut the box, hid it in
the pocket of her dressing-gown. How physical it was, this kind of pain, like
being terribly ill. Why couldn't one stop the shivering, the giddiness? And if
one couldn't, why didn't the next part follow -the part that would have made it
right again? Just dying? Just being dead?
'Look at this!' said Lady
Plackett. 'It's outrageous! Professor Somerville must be informed immediately
and take the necessary steps!'
Unaware of Verena's
expectations over Africa, she was no longer so pleased with Quinton who seemed
to be doing nothing to further his involvement with her daughter.
Verena, taking the
newspaper from her mother's hands, entirely agreed. She had not been able to
find anything to pin against Ruth, but there were things that still niggled on
the edge of her mind. Why had Ruth been carried to the tower at Bowmont where
no one else was allowed to go? What was the Austrian girl's connection
with Quin before she came?
'The impression is one of
lewdness,' she remarked in her precise voice, and felt a glow of satisfaction,
for if the Pro-fessor still harboured protective feelings for the foreigner,
this photograph would surely banish them.
'I shall ring his secretary
now,' said Lady Plackett.
Thus Quin, on the way back
from the museum where he had arranged Ruth's passage, and still treading on
air, found a message from Lady Plackett and made his way to the Lodge.
'We feel that you would
wish to be informed of how one of your students conducts herself in her spare
time,' said Lady Plackett, and opened the newspaper.
Quin did not consider how
the Daily Echo had got through the august portals of the Vice
Chancellor's Lodge. He did not stop to consider anything because the picture -a
half-spread on the centre page - hit him a blow for which he was entirely
unprepared.
It was of Ruth and Heini
side by side and very close together. They were not entwined, not lolling on a
sofa- not at all. Heini sat by a grand piano and Ruth was leaning across, one
arm in a curve behind his curly head and her face, as she followed the
instructions of the photographer, turned directly to the camera. Her wide
mouth, her sweet smile, thus stared out of the page, trusting and happy and
Heini, gazing up at her adoringly, was brushed by a straying tendril of her
hair.
The caption said — of
course it said — Heini and his Starling.
'I'm sure you will agree
that this kind of exposure in the gutter press is quite unacceptable,' said
Lady Plackett.
'And that isn't all,' said
Verena. 'She has endeavoured to bring the university down with her. Thameside
is specifically mentioned. She is referred to as one of its most brilliant
students.'
Quin was silent, bewildered
by the effect the picture had on him. He would have found it less painful to
have seen her photographed with Heini in bed. People went to bed for all sorts
of reasons, but the homage and devotion with which she bent to the boy was
devastating.
'She seems to have been the
victim of a somewhat unscrupulous journalist,' he said.
He spoke no less than the
truth. It was after the debacle in Janet's flat that Mantella had sent for Ruth
and confronted her with Zoltan Karkoly, a Hungarian journalist now working for
the Daily Echo. Karkoly had explained that his article would be one of
a series devoted to the more outstanding competitors in the Bootheby Piano
Competition and the music they would play, and had drawn her out skilfully on
her favourite topics. He thus found himself in possession of a great deal of
information about the livestock favoured by Mozart: not only the starling
bought for thirty-four kreutzers in the market, but a subsequent canary and the
horse which the composer had ridden through the streets of Vienna. His questions
about Ruth herself and her relationship with Heini were thrown in casually and
answered trustingly. Yes, she worked in the Willow; yes, she loved Thameside -
and yes, she would follow Heini to the ends of the earth, said Ruth who had
left him in a tumbled bed and escaped down the fire escape. And yes, she would
pose for photographs if it would help Heini's career.
So they had adjourned to
the Bechstein in the Wigmore Hall and Krakoly had taken several photographs,
but printed only the last one in which she turned her head a little, asking if
it was over, and her hair tumbled forward over Heini's shoulder so that only an
idiot would fail to catch the allusion to the painting By Love Surprised
which hung in every other drawing room.
Ruth had not seen Mr Hoyle's
article about the Willow and she had not seen Krakoly's piece in the Echo
- no one had money for newspapers in Belsize Park. But Quin now, staring down
at the fulsome words of adoration put into her mouth, found himself crushed by
a jealousy so painful that it must have shown him, if nothing else had done,
how utterly he was committed to this love.
'We take it you will speak
to her?' said Lady Plackett.
'Yes; I shall certainly do
that.'
By the time he drove back
over Waterloo Bridge, Quin was calm again. The article was certainly days old;
he himself knew of the tricks and distortions practised by journalists, but the
joy and wonder had gone from the day and, for the first time, he saw the
unlikeliness of what had happened. A man who has known countless women marries
a girl out of chivalry and finds in her his true and only love…
He let himself into the
flat and found Lockwood back from his weekend.
'There's a message for you
from Cavour and Stattersley,' he said. 'It was Mr Cavour what rung. You're to
ring him back when you get in; he'll be there till 6.30. The number's on the
pad.'
'Thank you.'
Now what? Surely they
couldn't have made a mistake -he'd been absolutely clear about Ruth's address,
and his instructions.
He went to the telephone.
Dialled… sat down; a thing he didn't generally do when he phoned.
'Ah, Professor Somerville.
I'm glad I've caught you. Something very strange has happened. The necklace has
been returned to us.'
'What?'
'At lunchtime. Miss Berger
came in herself and handed it back.'
'For alterations? It's too
long?'
'No, not for that, not to
be exchanged. I thought she might prefer different stones. Green is considered
unlucky by some people, you know. I had a client -'
'Yes, yes. Just tell me
what happened. What did she say?'
'She appeared to be very
angry. She said I was to tell you that she didn't want it. She was only in the
shop a moment. Very upset she seemed to be. We'll keep it here, sir, awaiting
your instructions. It can stay in our strong-room till then -only we'd appreciate
hearing from you soon; something as valuable as that is best kept in the bank.'
'Yes.' One must be polite.
One must thank Mr Cavour. One must eat the supper Lockwood had prepared.
Was it really that, then:
that old, old story? Using an experienced man to teach you the arts of love so
that you can return, unafraid, to your lover? Not such a bad idea, really. She
had probably read it in a book. '
No, that wasn't true. It
couldn't be true. 'I shall die if you leave me,' she had said not twenty-four
hours ago. But she had said other things too. She had said, 'I would follow
Heini to the ends of the earth.'
Resting his forehead
against the glass of the window, he struggled for belief, for the conviction of
her goodness which alone made life worth living. He would see her tomorrow. She
would come to his lecture; there would be an explanation. It couldn't be real,
this descent into hell.
'Oh, God - give me faith!'
begged Quin, reduced by this unfamiliar agony to the prayers of his childhood.
But God was silent and the
Thames, as Ruth had bidden it, flowed on and on and on.
Ruth sat in the Underground
and stared at the advertisement opposite.
Have you got chill spots?
Yes, a lot.
Have you got chill spots?
No.
Why not?
Cos Mr Therm is raving hot
And drives all chill spots
from the spot.
Mr Therm, a sort of flame
on legs, would have had to work very hard to drive the chill spots from her
heart… from her very soul. It wasn't true that she hadn't slept - after she'd
returned the necklace, she'd gone back home and told her mother she had a
migraine and got into her bed and pulled the blanket over her head and she had
slept, because being dismembered made one extremely tired. It wasn't the
sleeping that was the problem, it was the waking - the whole cycle of agony
repeated every hour: it cannot be true, I cannot have mistaken what went on
that night. And the green stones snaking into her dreams…
But in the morning she had
decided to go to college.
'Ruth, you're not fit to
go,' said Leonie, looking at her daughter's drawn face and quenched eyes.
'I must, Mama. It is the
last day of term and Professor Somerville's last lecture.'
She had said his name. She
had been British like Lord Nelson on the column.
But in the Underground, she
faced the truth. It wasn't courage, it was the impossibility of not being where
he was, and it was then, staring at Mr Therm and the Phonotas girl who would
come weekly to clean and sterilize your telephone, that the abject, crawling
thoughts came back again. For she had pleased him a little; she knew that. If
she accepted his terms, if she kept away from Bowmont and his public life… if
she got a job somewhere here in London and found a flat… a cheap flat like
Janet's where he could come sometimes? The annulment could go ahead, he could
marry some girl of his own world if he wished, but she would be there. Just to
see him once in a while… just to know that she didn't have to be pushed forward
into grey deserts of time without him.
No, it wouldn't work.
Secret love nests were for people in control, not for people who thought they
would die if someone got out of bed to fetch a glass of water. She loved him
far too much for that, she would make scenes and demands. There was only one
thing to do - finish her degree and get right away for ever.
When she got out at the
Embankment and made her way to the lift, she found that Kenneth Easton had been
on the same train. Kenneth was usually unfriendly, copying Verena's attitude,
but today he seemed to want to walk with her and Ruth saw that he looked pale
and wretched, so that their reflections, in the mirror of a shop, showed a pair
of weary, green-faced wraiths.
'You look a bit tired,'
said Ruth, as they made their way to the bridge.
'Yes, I am,' said Kenneth.
'I am very tired. I didn't sleep at all.'
'It's been a long term,'
said Ruth. 'You'll be able to take it easy after tomorrow. And you've been
playing a lot of squash - that's tiring.'
Kenneth turned to her, his
long face showing signs of gratitude, for she had given him the lead
he wanted.
'Yes, I have been playing a
lot of squash and it's a very expensive occupation. And in other ways too… you
may think it's easy all the time to say napkin instead of serviette
and that Featherstonehaugh is pronounced Fanshaw, but it can be quite a strain
and my mother doesn't always understand. In Edgware Green a toilet is a toilet
and if you suddenly start saying loo people look at you. But it didn't matter,
nothing mattered because I really thought that Verena might grow to care for
me.'
They had reached the river
and Ruth, for a moment, lost concentration. ('I shall buy a thousand lemonade
bottles and put a note in each and every one…')
When she could hear Kenneth
again, he was admitting to his foolishness. 'I short of declared myself. It was
last night after squash and we were having a drink together in the club and it
was so companionable. I completely forgot that my father was a grocer. He's
dead, of course, but that only makes it worse. If he'd lived he might have gone
on to other things, but now he's a grocer for ever.' 'And Verena turned you
down?'
'Yes, she did. And she told
me about Professor Somerville and that seemed to make it worse. I knew she
cared for him, of course, but I thought it might just be one-sided - only when
she told me about Africa, I realized - '
Watch the water, Ruth told
herself. Water heals… it carries away pain. 'What about Africa?'
'That the Professor is
taking her. She knew before, but she didn't say anything because it's a secret
- and yesterday she went to the Geophysical Society and the Professor's
assistant had just been to arrange for a special cabin. No one's supposed to
know -I shouldn't be telling you. You won't say anything, will you, Ruth?
Promise?' 'No, Kenneth. Of course I won't.' 'I should have understood. They
always stick together, the upper classes. People like us are all right for them
to amuse themselves with, but when it comes to the point we're nowhere. My
father's a grocer, that's all there is to it. I never had a chance.'
No. I never had a chance
either. My father is something worse than a grocer. Well, at least she was
spared the humiliation of offering herself to Quin as a kind of concubine. The
African journey was bound to be a long one and it was unthinkable that he
wouldn't marry Verena at some point. Kenneth had done her a good turn by
severing the last shreds of hope.
She managed a few words of
comfort, and together they made their way through the arch and into Thameside's
courtyard. Facing them, a confirmation of everything that Kenneth had told her,
stood Quin and Verena in animated conversation beneath the walnut tree.
Quin lifted his head; he
looked directly at her, and though she had thought in the night that nothing
could get worse, she had been wrong: for what she had to do now was not
to run towards him, not to throw herself into his arms and beg him to release
her from this nightmare, and that was worse. It was impossible, but she had
done it; she had plucked at Kenneth's arm, she was pronouncing words.
'Kenneth, I've decided not
to go to the lecture - Heini wanted me to come to the practice rooms and I feel
I ought to go. Will you tell Professor Somerville and make my excuses? Tell him
I have to be with my fiance - be sure to tell him that - and ask Sam to let me
borrow his notes;'
Kenneth, suffering also,
managed a magnanimous gesture. 'I'll let you have my notes, Ruth. My
handwriting is far more legible than Sam's.'
Quin had seen her come; had
seen her bright head, her gallant figure in its worn cape, and his heart had
leapt for now, in the morning, he knew it was impossible, what he had thought
in the night - and he waited for her to walk towards him, relieved and grateful
for the return of sanity. And then she checked and turned and went away, and
even before Kenneth gave - verbatim - Ruth's message, pronouncing the word
fiance in a way which was displeasing to Verena, the pain struck and clawed,
and incredulity became belief. He had been used and betrayed.
But Quin, as he went to his
room, had an escape which men have perfected and Ruth had yet to learn. Anger.
An all-enveloping fury, a rage which consumed him: rage against Heini, against
Ruth, against himself for having been duped. Tearing his gown from its hook,
marching blindly to his lecture, he let it have its way - this torrent of fury
which was so much less agonizing than the pain.
Ruth spent the Easter
vacation working. It was the work which, she assured her mother, accounted for
the rings under her eyes, her loss of appetite and a certain greenish tinge
under her skin.
'Then you must stop!'
yelled Leonie, unable to endure the sight of her lovely daughter reduced to the
kind of person one saw crawling out of bombed houses in newsreels of Canton or
Madrid.
'I can't,' said Ruth and
(inevitably) quoted Mozart who had said he went on working because it fatigued
him less than it did to rest.
If Ruth was exhausted,
Heini was in excellent spirits. He and Ruth had been completely reconciled. She
had come to him and asked his pardon and he had wholeheartedly forgiven her.
'It's not your fault,
darling,' he'd said. 'That flat would put anybody off. Only Ruth, if you'd help
me now, if you'd be beside me, I know I can win! I won't ask for
anything physical - when I'm established we can be married and have a honeymoon
in some splendid hotel. You see, Mantella thinks he can get me to America if
all goes well and if he does, you have to come with me! You have to -I couldn't
go alone.'
'America! Oh, Heini, that's
so far?
What he had said then,
standing in his shirtsleeves looking out at the grey, slanting rain, had shaken
her badly.
'Far?' said Heini. 'From
where?' - and she had seen what he saw in her adopted country: the shabby
lodgings, the poverty, the unfamiliar language and ill-cooked food. But she
struggled still.
'I couldn't leave my
parents.'
He'd taken both her hands
then, looked into her eyes.
'Ruth, you're being
selfish. We can bring them over as soon as I'm established. Everyone says
there's going to be a war -what if London is bombed?'
'Yes.' He was right. She
was being selfish. She could help her parents best that way… and help herself.
Three thousand miles of ocean should ensure that she was never tempted to crawl
cravenly back to Quin and the remembrance of happiness.
'All right, Heini; if you
win and Mantella can arrange it, I'll come. And I'll help you all I can.'
That had been two weeks ago
and Ruth had helped. She glued Heini's tattered music; she massaged
his fingers; she sat beside him as he mastered the dreaded arpeggios of the Hamtnerklavier.
She helped Pilly too,
travelling to her house and writing even more revision notes to paste on her
bedroom wall, till even Mr Yarrowby, shaving each day under diagrams of Reproduction
in the Porifera or graphs of Dinosaur Distribution in the United
States, became quite a competent zoologist. And she continued to work at
the Willow.
Just before Easter,
Professor Berger, whose tenure in Manchester had been renewed for three months,
moved into a larger room and asked Leonie to join him. Torn between her husband
and her daughter, Leonie became distracted and it was Ruth who bullied her.
'You must go, Mama,' she
insisted. 'I'm fine. I have Mishak and Tante Hilda and it's only a few weeks.
When the competition is over, and the exams, we'll have a marvellous holiday.'
So Leonie went and Ruth,
freed from the constraints of maternal care, worked even harder and felt even
iller - and then it was time for the beginning of the summer term.
Quin's lectures had ended
at Easter. In the weeks before the final exams he only gave two revision
seminars, spending the rest of the time in the museum.
He had been quite prepared
to deal with Ruth when he saw her: anger had been succeeded by an icy
indifference.
The past was done with;
Thameside itself, as the day of his departure grew nearer, was growing shadowy.
In the event, his studied indifference, the cool nod he meant to bestow on her,
were not needed. Ruth cut his seminars and managed never to be anywhere that he
might be. This was not the game of invisibility she had played at the beginning
of the year; this was a sixth sense bestowed on those who love unhappily and
one which seldom failed her. She knew when Quin was in college - even before
she saw the Crossley at the gates she knew - and took the necessary action.
That her work suffered was inevitable, but that no longer seemed to matter.
Survival was what mattered now.
Her friends, of course, saw
that she looked ill; that she had lost her appetite.
'What is it, Ruth?' Pilly
begged day after day - and day after day Ruth said, 'Nothing, I'm fine. I'm
just a bit worried about Heini, that's all.'
From being a girl tipped to
get a First, she became someone whom the staff hoped would simply last the
course. Dr Elke wanted to speak to her and then, for reasons of her own,
decided against it and Dr Felton, who normally would have made it his business
to find out what ailed her, was himself struggling through his days, for the
Canadian ballet dancer, to everyone's consternation, had produced twins. The
babies were enchanting - a boy and a girl - so that Lillian, after years of
frustration, achieved in one fell swoop a perfect family, but among their
accomplishments, the babies did not number an ability to sleep. Night after
night, poor Dr Felton paced his bedroom and thought wistfully of the days when
his wife's thermometer was all he had to contend with. He knew that Ruth was
unwell, that her work was slipping, but he too accepted the general opinion:
that she was anxious about Heini, that her work at Thameside was now second to
her life with him.
There was only one treat
which Ruth allowed herself during those wretched weeks, and it arose out of a
conversation she had with Leonie before her mother went north.
'That old philosopher,'
Ruth had asked. 'The one who used to meditate on the bench outside the Stock
Exchange. What happened to him?'
'Oh, they locked him away
in a Swiss sanatorium years ago. He was completely batty - when they came to clear
up his flat they found it full of women's underwear he'd stolen from the shops,
and he treated his housekeeper like dirt.'
That settled it. A man
could be mad and one could still heed his words; even being an underwear
fetishist could be forgiven - but ill-treating one's housekeeper was beyond the
pale.
And then and there, Ruth
gave up her long struggle to love Verena Plackett.
The results of the first
round of the piano competition were a surprise to no one. Heini was through, as
were the two Russians and Leblanc; and the second round confirmed the general
opinion that the winner must come from one of those four. But the Russians,
though exceedingly gifted, had been shut away in their hotel under the
'protection' of their escorts and Leblanc was a remote, austere man whom it was
difficult to like. By the time of the finals in the Albert Hall, Heini, with
his winning personality and his now well-known romance, was the public's
undoubted favourite.
'I feel so sick,'
said Ruth, and Pilly, beside her, pressed her hand.
'He'll win, Ruth. He's
bound to. Everyone says so.'
Ruth nodded. 'Yes, I know.
Only he was so nervous. All last night he kept waking up.'
All last night, too, Ruth
had stayed awake herself, making cocoa for Heini, stroking his head till he slept,
but not able to sleep again herself. Not that that mattered much: sleep was not
really one of her accomplishments these days.
A surprising number of
people had come to the Albert Hall for the finals of the Bootheby Piano
Competition. Of the six finalists, three had played the previous day: one of
the Russians, a Swede, and Leblanc whom Heini particularly feared. Today - the
last day - would start with the pretty American girl, Daisy MacLeod, playing
the Tchaikovsky and end with the tall Russian, Selnikoff, playing the
Rachmaninoff- and in between, came Heini. Heini had been disappointed when they
drew lots: he had hoped to play at the end. Whatever people said, the last
performer always stayed in people's minds.
The orchestra entered, then
the conductor. To get Berthold to conduct the BBC Symphonia for the concertos
was a real coup for the organizers. Heini, rehearsing with them in the morning,
had been over the moon.
On Ruth's other side,
Leonie turned to smile at her daughter. She had come down from Manchester and
meant to stay till the exams the following week. Her anxiety about Ruth, who
was clearly unwell, was underlain by a deeper wretchedness for she knew that if
Heini won it meant America and the idea of losing Ruth was like a stone on heir
chest.
'You must not show it,'
Kurt had said. 'You must want it. She'll be safe there and nothing matters
except that.'
Since March, when Hitler,
not content with the Sudeten-land, had marched into Prague, few people believed
any more in peace.
The whole row was filled
with Ruth's friends and relations. Beside Pilly sat Janet and Huw and Sam. The
Ph.D. student from the German Department was there, and Mishak and Hilda… even
Paul Ziller had come and that was an honour. Ziller was very preoccupied these
days; the chauffeur from Northumberland was pursuing him, begging to be heard
-there was pressure from all sides for him to lead a new quartet.
It was hot in the hall with
its domed roof. Leonie, dressed even at three in the afternoon like a serious
concert-goer in a black skirt and starched white blouse, fanned herself with
the programme. And now Daisy MacLeod came onto the platform with her dark hair
tied back with a ribbon and her pretty blue dress and shy smile, and a storm of
clapping greeted her. The Tchaikovsky suited her. She was very young; there
were rough passages and once or twice she lost the tempo, but Berthold eased
her back and the performance was entirely pleasing. Whether she won or not, she
was assured of a career.
The applause was loud and
prolonged, bouquets were carried onto the stage; the judges wrote things down
and nodded. Ruth liked Daisy, liked her playing, but: 'Oh, God, don't let her
win.'
And now the culmination of
all those weeks of worry and work. Heini came on the platform with his light,
springing gait; bowed. Ruth had searched the flower shops of Hamp-stead for the
perfect camellia, Leonie had ironed each ruffle on his shirt, but the charm,
the appealing smile, owed nothing to their ministrations. His platform manner
had always been one of his strong points, and Ruth looked up at the box where
Mantella sat with Jacques Fleury, the impresario, who as much as the judges
held the keys to heaven or hell. Mantella was important, but Fleury was god —
he could waft Heini over to the States, could turn him into a virtuoso and
star. Berthold raised his baton; the orchestra went into the tutti… the theme
was stated gently by the violins, taken up by the woodwind…
And everybody smiled.
Mantella had been right. The audience was ready for this music.
When the angels sing for
God they sing Bach, but when they sing for pleasure they sing Mozart, and God
eavesdrops.
Heini waited, looking down
at the keys in that moment of stillness she had always loved. Then he came in,
stating the theme so rightly, so joyfully… and she let out her breath because
he was playing marvellously. Obviously he had been nervous only to the
necessary degree: now he was purged of everything except this limpid, tender,
consoling music which flowed through him from what had to be heaven if there
was a heaven anywhere. He had performed this miracle for her the first time she
heard him and she would never tire of it, never cease to be grateful. All her
past was contained in the notes he played - all her life in the city she once
thought would be her home for ever. No wonder she had been punished when she
forsook that world.
The melody climbed and
soared, and she climbed with it, out of her sadness, her wretchedness, the
discomforts of her body… out and up and up. Ah God, if only one could stay up
there; if only one could live like music sounded - if only the music
never stopped!
The slow movement next. She
was old enough now for slow movements, she was immemorially old. It must be
possible to love someone who could draw such ravishment from the piano. And it
was possible. She could love Heini as a friend, a brother, someone whose
childishness and selfishness were of no account when set against this gift. But
not as a man - not ever, now that she knew… and suddenly the platform, Heini
himself, grew blurred in a mist of tears, for it was a strange cross that Fate
had laid on her, ordinary as she was: an inescapable, everlasting love for a
man to whom she meant nothing.
The last movement was a
relief, for no one could live too long in the celestial gravity of the Andante
- and here now was the famous theme! It would have to be a very unusual
starling to have sung that melody, but what did it matter? Only Mozart could be
so funny and so beautiful at the same time! Everyone was happy and Ziller was
nodding his head which was important. Ziller didn't like Heini, but he knew.
Then suddenly it was over
and Heini rose to an ovation. People stamped and cheered; a group of
schoolgirls threw flowers on to the stage - there were always schoolgirls for
Heini - and in his box, Jacques Fleury had risen to his feet.
'I'm sorry I said he was
too long in the bath,' said Leonie, dabbing her eyes. 'He was too long, but I'm
sorry I said it.'
He had to have won. There
could be no doubt… not really.
But now Berthold returned,
and the tall Russian, Selnikoff, to play the Rachmaninoff.
And, God, he was good! He
was terrifyingly good, with the weight of his formidable training behind him
and the outsize soul that is a Russian speciality.
Ruth's nausea was
returning. Please, God - oh, please… I'll do anything you ask, but let Heini
have what he so desperately wants.
The dinner, as always at
Rules, had been excellent; they'd drunk a remarkable Chablis, and Claudine
Fleury, in a little black dress which differed from a little chemise only on a
technicality, had made Quin a much-envied man.
Now she yawned as
delicately as she did everything. 'That was lovely, darling. I wish I could
take you back, but Jacques is here for another week.'
'Of course, I quite
understand,' said Quin, managing to infuse just the right amount of regret into
his voice. Claudine's father was notoriously easy-going, but there is an
etiquette about such things. She had rung him a few days earlier to suggest
dinner before he left for Africa and he had been ready to take the evening any
way it suited her, for he owed her many hours of pleasure, but the temporary
return of Jacques Fleury to attend to business was not unwelcome.
'How is Jacques? Has he
snapped up any more geniuses?'
'As a matter of fact, he has.
He called just before I left. He's signed up an Austrian boy - a pianist whom
he's going to bring to New York and turn into a star! There was some
competition today; he wanted me to come, but three concertos in one afternoon -
no thank you!'
'He won, then, this
Austrian?'
'No. He tied with a Russian
and he wasn't too pleased, I gather. Jacques thinks the Russian is more
musical, but you can't do anything with Russians; they're so guarded -whereas
he can get the Austrian boy over almost straight away. He's going to bring his
girlfriend over too - apparently she's very pretty and absolutely devoted…
worked in some cafe to pay for Radek's piano or something. Jacques thinks he
can use that at any rate till they're married; she photographs well! There was
some story about a starling…'
She yawned once more; then
stretched a hand over the table. 'I suppose we won't meet again before you go?'
'No, I'm off in less than
three weeks. And Claudine… thanks for everything.'
'How valedictory that
sounds, darling!' Her big brown eyes appraised him. 'Surely we'll meet again?'
'Yes. Of course.'
For a moment, he felt the
touch of her fingertips, light as butterflies, on his knuckles. 'I shall miss
you, cherie. I shall miss you very much, but I think you need this
journey,' she said. 'Yes, I think you need it badly.'
The news that Quin was
leaving Thameside, which the Vice Chancellor received officially on the first
day of the summer term, had affected Lady Plackett so adversely that Verena had
been compelled to take her mother aside and make her acquainted with the real
state of things.
'There is no doubt, Mummy,
that he means to take me to Africa, but the matter has to be a secret for the
time being. I can trust you, I know.'
Lady Plackett had not been
as pleased as Verena had hoped. It was a proposal of marriage that she wanted
from Quin, not the use of her daughter as an unpaid research assistant. She was
still busy bringing Thameside's morals up to scratch and had managed to get two
first-year students sent down who had been caught in flagrante in the gym, so
that her daughter accompanying a man, however platoni-cally, to whom she was
not married, was far from agreeable. But Verena had always done what she
wanted, and Lady Plackett, accepting that times had changed, continued to be
civil to Quin and to invite him to the Lodge.
Verena's preparations,
meanwhile, were going well. She had acquired a sunray lamp; she had been to the
Army and Navy Stores for string vests and khaki breeches; she rubbed methylated
spirits, nightly, into her feet. Some people might have wondered why the
Professor was taking so long to inform her of his plans, but Verena was not a
person to doubt her worth, and if she had felt any uncertainty, it would have
been quelled by Brille-Lamartaine whose increasingly fevered descriptions of
the academic femme fatale who had ensnared Somerville fitted her like
a glove.
Nevertheless, with the
final exams only a week away, Verena felt she could at least give the Professor
a hint. He had praised her last essay so warmly that it had brought a blush to
her cheek, and the intimate discussion she had had with him on the subject of
porous underwear seemed to indicate that the time for secrecy was past.
So Quin was invited to tea,
and aware that it was his last social engagement with the Placketts, he set
himself to please.
It was a beautiful early
summer day, with a milky sky and hazy sunshine. The French windows were open;
the view was one Quin had enjoyed so often in previous years when Charlefont
was alive and the talk had been easy and unaffected, not the meretricious
academic babble he had had to endure from the Placketts.
'Shall we go out on to the
terrace for a moment?' suggested Verena, and he nodded and followed her while
Lady Plackett tactfully hung back. Leaning over the parapet, Quin let his
thoughts idle with the lazy river, meandering down to the sea.
'You always live by water,
don't you?' the foolish Tansy Mallet had said, and it was true that he lived by
water when he could and was likely to die by it, for he still had his sights
set on the navy.
But it was not Tansy he
thought of now, nor any of the girls he had once known.
They had collected a lot of
rivers, he and Ruth. The Varne which she had intended to swim in a rucksack…
The Danube which had brought Mishak his heart's desire… and the Thames by which
they'd stood on the night he thought had set a seal on their love. Once more he
heard her recite with pride, and an Aberdonian accent so slight that only a
connoisseur could have detected it, the words which Spenser had penned to
celebrate an earlier marriage. Had she known it was a pro-thalamion, a wedding
ode, that she spoke, standing beside him in the darkness? Had Miss Kenmore told
her that?
And suddenly Quin was
shaken once more by such an agony of longing for this girl with her lore and
her legends, her funniness and the dark places which the evil that was Nazism
had dug in her soul, that he thought he would die of it.
It was as he fought it
down, this savage, tearing pain, that Verena, beside him, began to speak, and
for a moment he could not hear her words. Only when she repeated them, laying a
hand on his arm, did he manage to make sense of her words.
'Isn't it time we told
everyone, Quin?' she asked - and he recoiled at the intimacy, the innuendo in
her voice. 'Told them what?'
'That you are taking me to
Africa? I know, you see. Brille-Lamartaine told me that you were taking one of
your final students and Milner confirmed it. You could have trusted me.'
Horror gripped Quin. Too
late he saw the trail of misunderstandings that had led to this moment. But he
was too fresh from his images of Ruth to be civil. The words which were forced
out of him were cruel and unmistakable, but he had no choice.
'Good God, Verena,' he
said, 'you don't think that I meant to take you?'
The final examinations for
the Honours Degree in Zoology took place in the King's Hall, a large, red-brick
building shared by all the colleges south of the river. An ugly; forbidding
place, its very walls seemed steeped in the fear of generations of candidates.
Dark wooden desks, carefully distanced each from the other, faced a high
rostrum on which the invigilators sat. There were notices about not smoking,
not eating, not speaking. A great clock, located between portraits of rubicund
Vice Chancellors, ticked mercilessly, and the stained floorboards were bare.
To this dire place, Ruth
and her friends had crawled, day after day, their stomachs churning… had waited
outside, pale with fear and sleeplessness, trying to crack jokes till the bell
rang and they were admitted, numbered like convicts, to shuffle to the
forbidding desks with their blue folders, the white rectangles of blotting
paper which they would see in their dreams for years to come.
But today was the last
exam, if the most important. In three hours they would be free! It was the
Palaeontology paper, the one in which Ruth would have hoped to excel, but she
hoped for nothing now except to survive.
'It'll be all right,
Pilly.' Wretched as she was, Ruth managed to smile at her friend, glad that
whatever else had gone wrong with her life she had not neglected to help Pilly.
'Don't forget to do the "Short Notes" question if there is one; you
can always pick up some marks on those.'
The bell rang. The door
opened. Even on this bright June morning, the room struck chill. The two
invigilators on the platform were unfamiliar: lecturers from another college
whose students also had exams this morning. A woman with a tight bun of hair
and a purple cardigan; a grey-haired man. Not Quin, who was sailing in a week,
and Ruth was glad. If things went wrong, as they had before, she wouldn't want
him watching her.
'You may turn over your
papers and begin,' said the lady with the bun in a high, clear voice.
A flutter of white
throughout the hall… 'Read the paper through at least twice,' Dr Felton had
said. 'Don't rush. Select. Think.'
But it would be better not
to select or think too long. Not this morning…
What do you understand by
the Theory of Allotnetric Growth} She could do that; it was a question she'd have
enjoyed tackling under different circumstances - the kind of question that
enabled one to show off a little. Discuss Osborn's concept of
'aristogenesis' in the evolution of fossil vertebrates. That was
interesting too, but perhaps she'd better do the dunce's question first -
Question Number 4. Write short notes on a) Piltdown Man b) Archaeopteryx c)
The Great Animal of Maastricht…
Clever candidates were
usually warned against the 'short notes' questions; they didn't give you a
chance to excel - but she wasn't a clever candidate now, she was Candidate
Number 209 and fighting for her life.
Verena had started writing
already; she could hear her scratching with her famous gold-nibbed pen. Verena
frightened her these days. Verena was solicitous, her eyes bored into Ruth.
But Verena didn't matter.
Nothing mattered except to get through the next three hours of which seven
minutes had already passed.
The Theory of Allotnetric
Growth, which quantifies the relationship of small animals to large ones, wrote Ruth, deciding
to take a chance.
Pilly scratching out her
views on Piltdown Man, whose reconstructed skull mercifully hung above her
father's shaving mirror, looked up, saw Ruth's bright head bent over her paper,
and exchanged a relieved look with Janet. The clock jerked forward to the first
half-hour. One question done, thought Ruth; four more… The short notes, then,
because it was beginning; it was getting quite bad, actually, but she would
fight it off; she would take deep breaths and it would pass. Oh God, I've
worked so hard, she thought, suddenly swamped by self-pity. It can't all be
wasted!
The Great Animal of
Maastricht was discovered in 1780 in the underground quarries of St Peter's
Mountain, wrote Ruth, her pen moving very fast because nothing mattered except to
get something down for which someone could give her a mark. If she failed this
paper, she would fail her degree… there could be no resits in December; not for
her.
But there was no way of
writing fast enough. She could feel the sweat breaking out on her skin, the
dizziness… Another deep breath.
Ruth put up her hand.
On the dais the lady with
the bun looked up, said something to the man beside her, and made her way
slowly, agonizingly slowly, between the desks.
'Yes?'
'I need to go to the
toilet.'
'So soon?' The lady was
displeased. 'Are you sure?' She looked again at Ruth, at the beads of sweat on
her forehead. 'Very well. Come with me.'
Everyone watched as Ruth
was led out. It was a complicated procedure, taking out a candidate - no one
could go unwatched. It was like escorting a prisoner, making sure there was
nothing secreted behind the lavatory seat - no file to saw through the bars, no
crib giving the geological layers of the earth's crust.
Pilly bit her lip. Huw and
Sam exchanged worried glances. Ruth had had to go out before, but never so
early.
Then Verena, too, put up
her hand.
This wasn't just
inconvenient; this had the making of a minor crisis. No candidate could leave
the room unattended - on the other hand at least one invigilator had to be
present at all times. Up on the rostrum, the grey-haired man frowned and
pressed a bell beneath his desk. A secretary from the Examination Office
appeared in the doorway and was directed to the desk where Verena, still
writing with her right hand, continued to hold her left arm aloft.
'I wish to be excused,'
said Verena.
The secretary nodded.
Verena rose - and the incredulous gaze of all the Thameside candidates followed
her to the door. It was hard to believe that Verena even had bodily
functions.
The gold hand of the great
clock jerked forward… three minutes… four…
Then Verena returned. She
looked pleased and well, and immediately took up her pen again. Of Ruth Berger
there was no sign.
It'll be all right, thought
Pilly frantically. Ruth had had to go out in the Physiology exam too, and in
the Parasitology practical… but never for as long as this. Never for twenty
minutes… for half an hour… for forty minutes… Ruth was clever but no one could
miss so much of an exam and still pass.
The woman with the bun had
returned long ago; she was conferring with the grey-haired man, they were
looking at Ruth's empty desk.
Three-quarters of an hour…
an hour…
And then it was over and
still she had not come.
She was the most famous
ship on the Atlantic route: the Mauretania, still Queen of the Ocean
with her luxurious salons, her cinema, her glamorous shops. Film stars
travelled on her and Arab princes and business tycoons. Even now a woman in a
fantastic fur coat was coming up the gangway, pursued by photographers for whom
she turned and produced a dazzling smile. Heini too had been photographed as he
left on the boat train; his life, since the competition, had been completely
transformed. Even half the prize money had enabled him to leave Belsize Park
and move into a small hotel. He could have travelled First Class too, but
Fleury was bringing Ruth over and that meant travelling Tourist. Having made
that sacrifice made Heini feel benign - and actually even the Tourist
accommodation was luxurious enough. Leaning on the rail watching for Ruth, who
should have been here by now, Heini let his eye travel over the bustle of the
docks - cranes loading mysterious packages, vans bringing last-minute cargo -
and drank in the smell of tar and rope and seaweed. The Mauretania
might be a kind of floating grand hotel, but she was still a ship, and a
dockside the world over catches at the heart strings with its promise of
adventure.
It was all beginning, his
new life, the life he knew from childhood was really his. America and fame! And
he would share it with Ruth, young as he was. There would be many women who
would want him - Heini, without conceit, knew that - but a musician needs roots
and a wife. Horowitz's playing had taken on a new depth when he married
Toscanini's daughter; Rubinstein's wife protected him from all disturbance.
Ruth would do that for him, he knew.
Only where was Ruth? He
looked at his watch, for the first time a little anxious. He had respected her
wish to make her own way to the docks - in fact he had been rather patient with
all Ruth's moods and foibles in the month since the end of her exams. The
results weren't out yet, but he sympathized with her disappointment. Having
gastric flu during the finals was rotten luck and having missed almost the
whole of the last paper was a real blow to a girl as ambitious as Ruth. The
most she could hope for now was an aegrotat and that wasn't worth much, but he
didn't see that it mattered greatly now that her life was linked with his.
Only an hour before they
sailed. Some of the relatives and friends who'd come on board were leaving.
Perhaps he'd given Ruth too much freedom? She'd insisted on making her own
arrangements for her visa and he'd given way over that too, but he hoped in
general that she wasn't going to be obstinate.
A poor family, obviously
immigrants from the East - the men in black wide-brimmed hats, the women in
shawls, pushing children, made their way up the gangway to the steerage - bound
for some sweatshop in Brooklyn perhaps. Two old women belonging to them waited
on the quayside, waving and keening: steerage passengers were not allowed to
bring relatives on board to see them off. There'd have been plenty of weeping
and wailing in Belsize Park as they said goodbye to Ruth; he was glad he'd
missed all that. He'd have to be a bit careful about Ruth's determination to
bring her family over. He'd promised to do it and he would do it, but there
were expenses to take care of first: a decent apartment, a Steinway, insuring
his hands…
Ah, thank God, there she
was, making her way through the crowd. She wore her loden cape, buttoned up
even on this warm day, and carried her straw basket so that she looked even
more like a goose girl on an alp, and for a moment he wondered if he had made a
mistake… if she would fit in with the sophisticated life he was bound to lead.
But Mantella thought the world of her, and Fleury… and his father ate out of
her hand. He had never met a man who didn't like Ruth, and now as she came up
the gangway, a sailor walking down turned his head to look at her.
'Ruth!'
'Heini!'
They were in each other's
arms; he felt her hair against his cheek, the warmth, the familiarity.
'You've been crying,
darling.' He was solicitous, wiping a tear away with his fingers.
'Yes. But it doesn't
matter. It's all right now. And I've brought us a present. A lovely present. It
was a chance in a million, finding them in the summer, but look!'
She bent down to the straw
basket and took out a small brown paper bag which she put into his hands. Heini
felt the warmth before he opened it, and smiled.
'Maroni! Oh, Ruth,
that takes me back!'
He took out a chestnut,
almost too warm to hold, gazed at the spilt skin, the wrinkled, roasted flesh -
drank in the delicious smell. Both of them now were back in the city they had
grown up in, wandering along the Karntnerstrasse, dipping into the bag…
sharing… sniffing… Ruth had carried them in her muff for him, walking to fetch
him from the Conservatoire… Once they had eaten three bags of them, driving in
a sledge through the snowbound Prater.
'I'll peel one for you,'
said Ruth - and she freed it deftly from the skin and held it out to him - as
she had held out wild strawberries on the Grundlsee, a piece of marzipan
pilfered from her mother's kitchen.
'Shall we take them down
below?' he suggested.
'No, let's eat them here,
Heini. Let's stay by the sea.'
So they stood side by side
and emptied the bag and threw the skins into the water, where they were swooped
on - and then rejected - by the gulls.
'Is your luggage aboard,
then?' asked Heini. 'We sail in less than an hour.'
'Everything's taken care
of,' said Ruth. She put her arms round him and once again he felt her tears. 'Only
listen, darling - there's something I have to tell you.'
No one ever forgot where
they were on the morning of the 3rd of September.
Pilly, who had joined the
WRNS without waiting for the result of her exams, heard Chamberlain's quavery
voice in the naval barracks at Portsmouth. Janet heard it in her father's
vicarage the day after which, to everyone's amazement, she had become engaged
to his curate.
The inhabitants of Number
27 heard the news that Britain was at war with Germany clustered round the
crackling wireless set in Ziller's room and as they listened the expression on
every face was strangely similar. Relief that the shillyshallying and
compromise were over at last, and with it the realization that they were cut
off finally from the relatives and friends that they had left behind in Europe.
And from Ruth. From Ruth
who had been five weeks in America and had not yet written - or probably had
written, but the letter with the uncertainty of the time had not arrived. And
now every mail would be threatened by U-boats, every telephone line
requisitioned for the war.
'Oh, Kurt,' said Leonie,
coming to stand beside her husband.
'Just think that she is
safe. That's all you have to think of; that she is safe.'
Almost before Chamberlain
had stopped speaking came the air-raid warning, and with it a taste of things
to come as Fraulein Lutzenholler dived under the table and Mishak went out into
the garden so as to die in the open air. A false alarm, but it made it easier
for Leonie to heed her husband's words. Ruth was safe - the Mauretania
had berthed without mishap; they had rung the shipping office. She herself had
said it might be a while before a letter reached them, but oh, God, let her
write soon, thought Leonie. She knew how disappointed Kurt had been in Ruth's
exam results: the aegrotat she had been awarded was almost worthless - and in
something about Ruth herself which had held them at a distance before she
sailed, but he suffered scarcely less than she did at this separation from the
daughter he loved so much.
Quin heard the news three
days later in a manner which would have done credit to a Rider Haggard yarn. A
horse-man, galloping across the plains towards him in a cloud of dust, reigned
in and handed him a letter.
'So it's come,' said Quin,
and the African nodded.
One by one the men who had
been working on the cliff put down their tools. There was no need to ask what
had happened. The Commissioner at Lindi had promised to inform them and he had
kept his word.
'We're going home, then?'
asked Sam - and filled his eyes with the blue immensity of the sky, the sea of
grass- the antelopes moving quietly over the horizon.
Quin put an arm round the
boy's shoulder. Sam had proved his worth out here and would never be free now
of the longing to return.
'Yes,' he said. 'Straightaway.'
The first weeks of the war
saw a number of crises in Belsize Park, but none was due to enemy action. The
old lady two doors down collided with a lamp post in the blackout and was taken
to Dr Levy, now permitted to practise his profession and established in a
surgery on Hampstead Hill. An officious air-raid warden reduced Miss Violet to
hysterics by hammering on her bedroom door and accusing her of being a German
spy because a chink of light was visible between her curtains. Leonie, now
employed in the kitchen of a service canteen behind Trafalgar Square, was
reprimanded for spreading margarine too thickly on the soldiers' sandwiches. Leaflets
were showered on the populace: they were told to Dig for Victory, to remember
that Careless Talk Costs Lives, to Carry Their Gas Masks at all times. Evacuated
children from the slums of London screamed in the silence and safety of their
country billets.
Only at sea had the war
started in earnest. Ships travelled in convoy and in secrecy, escorted by
destroyers; even so the U-boats claimed victim after victim - and every boat
sent to the bottom could have carried the letter Ruth had written to assure her
parents that she was safe and well.
But when at last the longed-for
letter came from New York, it was not from Ruth, but from Heini, and by the
time she had read it, Leonie was a shivering wreck clinging to the edge of the
table.
Heini wrote to thank them
for their hospitality throughout the years and he enclosed a message for Ruth.
'I don't want to reproach
her,' he wrote, 'I suppose it was honest of her to say that she did not love me
and did not want to share my life. But you can imagine how I felt, sailing
alone to an unknown land. Fortunately, as soon as I arrived, everything went
splendidly. The Americans are as warm-hearted as one hears and my debut at the
Carnegie Hall was a triumph. Will you tell Ruth this, and tell her too that
someone else has now entered my life - a very musical woman, a little older,
who uses her influence to help me and who insisted that I move into her
apartment - a dream-like place with picture windows overlooking Central Park. So
Ruth must not feel guilty - but she must not think either that I shall take her
back. I shall always remember her with fondness, as I remember all of you, but
the past is past.'
Leonie had collapsed into a
chair, trying to still the trembling of her limbs. 'God, Kurt, what has
happened? Where is she? Why didn't she tell us?'
'Hush, hush. There will be
an explanation.' But as he stroked his wife's back, the Professor himself was
fighting for control. This couldn't happen twice, his beloved daughter lost in
the Underworld.
'We must tell the police. They
must find her,' said Leonie.
'We will see first what we
can discover for ourselves.'
But they discovered
nothing. Pilly, to whom they telegraphed, had not heard from Ruth, nor had
Janet and everyone at Thameside believed that Ruth had sailed on the Mauretania.
Once more, Leonie stifled her sobs under the pillow and drearily promised God
to be good, but before she could make herself seriously ill, a letter came by
the afternoon post with which Hilda hurried to the Willow, where Miss Maud and
Miss Violet, their windows taped, their doors suitably sand-bagged, were carrying
on as usual.
'It came just now - that's
Ruth's handwriting, I'm sure.'
Silence fell in the cafe as
the envelope was opened. Silence was maintained as Leonie and her husband read
what Ruth had written.
'She is safe,' said Leonie
at last. 'She is safe and in England. In the country. And she has a job.'
'So why this long face?'
enquired von Hofmann. 'Why are you not dancing on the tables?'
Things had gone well with
him since the outbreak of war. A whole spate of anti-Nazi films were lined up
by the studios and he had secured the part of an SS officer who said not only Schvpeinehund
but Gott in Himmel before dying a very nasty death.
'She wants to be alone.' Leonie's
lip trembled as she tried to embrace this extraordinary concept.
'Like Greta Garbo?' enquired
the lady with the poodle.
Leonie shook her bewildered
head. 'I don't understand… she says she must be independent… she must learn to
grow up by herself. Later she will come back, but now she must discover who she
is. Twice she says this about the discovering.'
'Everybody goes through
such times,' said Ziller. 'Times when they need to find out who they are. It is
natural.'
Mrs Weiss disagreed. 'So
she finds out who she is?' she said, spearing a piece of guggle with her fork. 'What
has she from that? Myself, it is bad enough that I am it, but to find
out, no!'
Mrs Weiss' views, rather
surprisingly, were shared by Miss Maud and Miss Violet who said they thought it
didn't do much good to go delving about in one's self, but were sure it
wouldn't last.
'You'll see,' said Miss
Maud, 'she'll be back soon enough. It's feeling she's failed you with the
exams, perhaps, and breaking with Heini.'
'There is no address,' said
Leonie wretchedly. 'And I can't read what is on the stamp. But in the post
office they will read it and tell me. We must find her, Kurt; we
must!'
Professor Berger put down
the letter in which his daughter had begged for their understanding. 'No,' he
said curtly. 'We will respect her wishes.'
'Oh, God -I don't want to
respect her wishes, I want her!' cried Leonie.
'We have spoken enough of
this,' said the Professor - and she looked up, silenced, aware of a hurt even
deeper than her own.
'No go home?' begged
Thisbe, as Ruth pushed her pushchair back down the rutted lane.
'Thisbe, we have to go
home. It's teatime.'
The little girl's face
puckered; she let out a thin wail. Ruth bent down to her. The wind was getting
up, the top of the fells were wreathed in mist. However much both she and the
three-year-old Thisbe preferred to be out of doors, there were limits. The Lake
District in late autumn was beautiful, but it was hardly suitable for alfresco
life.
'No soup?' begged Thisbe,
shifting her ground.
Ruth sighed. She felt
sympathy with Thisbe who dreaded a return to the domestic hearth: to the cold
stone floors of the tiny shepherd's cottage, the chaos, the screams of her two
brothers as they returned from school. Progressive child-rearing did not suit
Thisbe, who was no trouble as she and Ruth plodded through the countryside
conversing with sheep, picking berries, chatting on stone walls, but became
almost ungovernable at home.
Ruth had been two months
now with the lady weaver whose children she had looked after on Hampstead
Heath. Penelope Hartley was kind enough in a vague way, and offering Ruth bed
and board in exchange for help with the children was generous under the
circumstances. When war became inevitable and she had transferred her loom to
Cumberland, Ruth had gone with her. There was certainly plenty of wool which
Penelope gathered from the hedges, often in a less than appetising state, and
carded and dyed… and out of the appalling muddle in which she worked, there
did, surprisingly, emerge some rather pleasant and occasionally saleable rugs. But
Mr Hartley, some years ago, had sought consolation elsewhere, and Penelope had
rather let things go.
Inside the small, dark
cottage with its oil lamps and view of a sheer scree, they found something
nameless bubbling on the stove. Not a sheep's head broth, for Penelope did not
eat meat, but a vegetable equivalent: a stew of mangelwurzels, old carrots, the
tops of Brussels sprouts caught by the first frost, which nevertheless managed
to suggest the presence of bristles and teeth and protruding eyes.
'No soup!'
repeated Thisbe, and lay down on the floor, ready to start a tantrum.
'No, we'll find some bread
and butter.'
Rationing had not yet
affected them here, so far from the towns; there was plenty of food in
Cumberland or there would have been if there had been any money to buy it with
and not all the villagers turned away from Ruth; some had been helpful. But, of
course, Penelope believed in 'Nature', not realizing how very unnatural good
husbandry really is. Three damp chickens which did not lay wandered into the
house, soiling the flagstones; old milk, dripping through discoloured muslin,
failed dismally to turn into cheese.
The boys now returned
noisily from school. Peter, whom she had pleased by hitting him on the leg in
the far-off days on Hampstead Heath, and Tristram, a year older.
'Oh God, not mother's muck,'
said Tristram. 'I won't eat it, and she needn't think it.'
Ruth, fetching peanut
butter and apples from the larder, reassured him. If only it didn't get dark so
soon. When they'd first come, she'd been able to go out with the boys after
supper while they kicked a ball around or searched for conkers, but now they
all faced an interminable evening sitting round the smoking Aladdin lamp. Even
so she could manage if only Penelope stayed next door at her loom. They could
play dominos or ludo - at least they could if the pieces weren't lost again;
she wasn't as nimble as she had been at crawling round the floor looking for
missing toys after the children were in bed.
But, of course, Penelope
did come in, concerned for her motherhood, and within minutes the boys were at
each other's throats and Thisbe was lying on the floor drumming her heels. Too
many sages had made their way into Penelope Hartley's head: Rudolf Steiner who
said children should not learn to read till their milk teeth were shed; the
Sufi chieftain who set Penelope to her meditations instead of the washing up;
A. S. Neill with his child-centered education. The poor, confused children of
Penelope Hartley were so child-centered that they almost imploded each night in
the confines of the tiny cottage - and tonight, as so often before, Ruth who
was supposed to finish her work at seven, carried Thisbe upstairs and eased her
into her nappies and sat with her till she slept.
And then the long evening
began when she went to her attic under the eaves which was at least her own and
looked out at the darkness and the rain, and longed for her mother and the lore
and certainties of her own childhood and the painted cradle, now splintered
wood, in which her baby should have lain.
But she wouldn't yield. It
wasn't so long now - less than two months. She would see it through on her own.
Not whose I am, but who I am, there lies my search… The lines of some
half-remembered poem ran again through her head.
Only who was she? Someone
who had loved and been rejected; a daughter who had caused her parents
disappointment and pain… and now, soon, a mother who knew nothing.
And yet she had no regrets.
She blamed no one, not even Verena, hissing her ultimatum in the cloakroom,
threatening to expose her condition unless she left Thameside then and there,
and for ever. In a way Verena had done her a service, bringing home the
contempt and disgust with which the world might now regard her state. If her
father, so strict, so upright, had turned his back on her as a fallen woman, Ruth
couldn't have borne if. she'd have revealed the marriage and then it would have
all have begun… finding Quin, letting him know… begging for a place in his
life… And Verena had kept her own side of the bargain; no one at college knew
what had happened or where she was.
Nor had Quin carried her
dreamily from his sofa to his bed. He had said: 'Wait; there are things to be
attended to.' He had said it very gently, very lovingly, cupping her face in
his hands, but firmly: he had begun to leave her, and it was she who had clung
on to him and said: 'No, no, you mustn't go!'… because even then she couldn't
bear to be away from him. 'It's absolutely safe,' she'd said. 'It's my
completely safe time; I know because of Dr Felton's wife and the
thermometers. It's as safe as houses!'
She hadn't been lying;
she'd believed it and he'd believed her. Only houses, these days, were not so
very safe: houses in Guernica and Canton and Warsaw toppled like cards as bombs
fell on them, and she'd been wrong. She'd been a whole week out in her
calculations and that was another mark chalked up to Fraulein Lutzenholler and
Professor Freud. She wasn't usually sloppy about dates - it was that damnable
thing way below the level of reason which all along had wanted nothing except
to belong to this one man.
And even now, an official
'unmarried mother' from whom the older villagers averted their eyes, even now
when Quin had unmistakably rejected her, there was, deep down below the anxiety
and fear for the future, an unquenchable sense of joy because she was carrying
his child.
Only the child itself had
lately disconcerted her. This fishlike creature still unable to breathe or eat
except by her decree, had developed a will of its own. Ruth did not need the
doctors in the antenatal clinic to which she travelled once a fortnight on
innumerable buses, to tell her that her baby was fit and well, but what about
its mental state - its obstinacy? It disagreed completely with Ruth's careful
plans and was profoundly uninterested in her voyage of self-discovery.
Bowmont is only sixty miles
away, it said, twisting its foot merrily round her spinal nerves. You
may be an upstart and an outcast, but I'm half a Somerville.
I want, it said, my home.
At the end of November,
Leonie received a visit from Mrs Burtt who had left the Willow to work in a
munitions factory and was greatly missed by the customers. Smartly dressed in a
new brown coat and a hat with a feather, she was carrying a small parcel
wrapped in silver paper and seemed a little shy and tentative which was not her
usual state.
'I'm sorry to be bothering
you,' she said, 'but… well, I thought you wouldn't mind; you wouldn't take it
amiss.'
'How could I do this?'
asked Leonie. 'I am very happy to see you.'
She led Mrs Burtt into the
sitting room, in which one could actually sit once more now that the piano had
been sent back, and offered coffee which Mrs Burtt refused.
'I don't want to pry,' she
said, after asking rather oddly if they would be undisturbed. 'But well, I
really like her, you know, and people sometimes say things, but I know Ruth is
as good as they make them. And her going off like that to have it on her own…
well, it's like her. Not wanting to bother anyone. But I want her to know that
whatever she's done I know she's a good girl and I'd like you to give this to
her. Afterwards. Not before, because that's bad luck, but when it's all over. I
knitted it myself.'
She laid the parcel on the
table, and Leonie, who was having trouble with her breathing, stretched out her
hand, 'May I see?' she said.
Mrs Burtt removed the
wrapping paper. Pride shone for a moment on her face. 'Took me hours, that did.
It's a brute of a pattern. It's those scallops, see? But it's come out nice,
hasn't it? I kept it white to be on the safe side, but she can put a blue ribbon
through it or a pink when it's all over.'
Leonie was still having
difficulty with the business of drawing air into her lungs. 'Thank you - she
will be so pleased. It is the most beautiful jacket. I will see that she has
it… and tell her… what you have said.'
Mrs Burtt nodded. 'I don't
want to know any more now,' she said. 'It's not my business. Just to know she's
all right and the baby's safe.'
Leonie, swallowing the
unbearable hurt her daughter had done her, said: 'Did she tell you… herself…
about the baby?'
Mrs Burtt shook her head
'Bless you, no. She's no blabber. But I was one of four daughters and I've
three girls of my own. I guessed soon enough. There's ways of being sick that's
a bug in the tummy and there's ways that isn't. And she got so tired. I came
out with it and I think it was a relief she could talk to someone.'
'And… where she was going…
her plans? Did she tell you about that?'
'No. And I didn't ask her. I
knew it wasn't Heini that was the father, so there wasn't any more for me to
say.'
Leonie lifted her head. 'How
did you know?' she asked.
'Well, you could see she
didn't love 'im, couldn't you? Tried too hard all the time… And if it wasn't
him, I wasn't going to go nosing around.'
'I didn't see… as well as
you,' said Leonie out of her deep despair.
Mrs Burtt's work-roughened
hand rested for a moment on her own. 'You was so close, the two of you,' she
said. 'You loved her so much. It's a real killer, love is, if you want to see.'
Left alone, Leonie sat as
still as a statue, holding the exquisite, tiny garment in her hands. Ruth had
not trusted her. She had confided in a lady who washed dishes and not in her. She
had gone off alone.
Professor Berger, returning
home, found her still in a state of shock.
'What has happened, Leonie?
What have you got there?'
'It's a baby's jacket.' She
traced the scallops on the collar, the lacy frill, with blind fingers. 'Mrs
Burtt brought it for Ruth.'
She watched as her
husband's face changed; saw the incredulity, the dismay… then the tightness of
anger,
'My God, that scoundrel,
Heini. I'll force him to marry her,' he said furiously.
'Oh, Kurt, it isn't Heini's
child. If it was she'd have gone with him.'
This was worse. His
beloved, protected daughter a fallen woman, the bearer of an unknown child. Pitying
him as he paced the room, Leonie had no energy to retrieve him from his
conventional hell of moral outrage. What is it I have not understood? she
thought. What is it that is missing here? And if I was right all along, how
could it have come to this?
The doorbell rang, shrill
and insistent. Neither of the Bergers moved.
'What are you going to do?'
asked the Professor — and the sudden helplessness of this proud man did touch
her.
'I'll tell you what I'm
going to do,' she began.
A second ring… and now
Fraulein Lutzenholler's door could be heard opening, and her indignant
footsteps as she made her way downstairs. The easing of laws against refugees
at the onset of hostilities meant she was allowed to practise her profession
and, incredible as it seemed, people came to her room and paid to have her
listen. Answering the doorbell would annoy this exalted person very much.
She returned, as displeased
as Leonie had anticipated, and with her was a red-faced man in some kind of
uniform.
'It's the rodent officer,'
said Fraulein Lutzenholler - and as Leonie stared blankly at this man she had
awaited with hope and passion for month after month: 'He has come about the
mice.'
'Oh, yes… thank you…' Leonie
rose, tried to collect herself.
'Please go where you will. They
are everywhere. The kitchen is bad… and the back bedroom.'
'That's all right, ma'am. I'll
just get on with it. Looks like a sizable infestation you have here - I may
have to take up some boards.'
He left the room and they
could hear him moving about, tapping the walls, opening cupboards.
'I'll tell you what I'm
going to do,' said Leonie, turning back to her husband. 'I'm going to take
Ruth's letter to the post office and make them tell me where it comes from and
then I'm going to go there and find her. And when I have found her I'm going to
bring her back here and look after her and after my grandchild. And if the
father's a chimney sweep I'm going to do it.' She swallowed. 'Even if he is a Nazi
chimney sweep, because if Ruth gave herself to him it's because she loved him
and she is my blood and yours also, so you will please not - '
A knock at the door and the
rodent officer reappeared.
'I found this under the
boards in the back room,' he said - and deposited on the table a large, square
biscuit tin covered in mouse droppings and adorned with a picture of the
Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret Rose patting a corgi dog.
She had come by bus as far
as Alnwick, but there were eight miles still to go before she reached Bowmont. She'd
have walked it easily enough in the old days, but not now, and she spent some
of her meagre stock of money on a taxi as far as the village. It would have
made sense to be set down by the house itself, but she couldn't face that. She
didn't want to sweep up as a claimant - it was sanctuary she sought at Bowmont,
not her rights.
The driver was worried; she
had a suitcase, the afternoon was grey and chill, but she reassured him.
'I'll be all right,' she
said. 'I need some air.'
She certainly looked as
though she needed something, thought the driver, turning his cab, watching the
bundled figure in its shabby cape set off up the hill.
There was nobody about and
that was a blessing; there might have been people who recognized her and till
she knew her fate she wanted to speak to no one. And her fate depended on a
ferocious old woman known for her sharp temper and her strict and old-fashioned
views.
'I hope you're satisfied,'
she said bitterly, addressing her unborn child. She had fought a long battle,
pitting her pride and independence against the creature's blind, stubborn
thrust towards what it considered to be its home, and she had lost. Now,
trudging up the hill, she tried to face the consequences of rejection. Where
would she go if she was turned away? It was growing dark, she could hardly go
back to Penelope whose advice she had ignored… whom, in a sense, she had left
in the lurch. She was mad, coming here like this at the eleventh hour.
'Oh God, why did I listen?
she thought, for the sense of dialogue between herself and the child had been
with her from the start.
But she knew why. Even now,
in the bitter cold of a raw December day with the storm clouds massing in the
west and the light withdrawing itself in readiness for an endless winter night,
she walked through a heart-stopping beauty, The wind-tossed trees, the tumble
and thrust of the waves against the cliffs and Bowmont's tower etched against a
violet sky, brought a sudden mist of tears to her eyes — and that was not very
sensible nor very practical. She had to find her way, not stumble, for she was
not alone.
Yet memories, as she made
her way up the last stretch of road, came unbidden to weaken her further. The
incredible clarity of the stars; the dazzling silver of the morning sea the
first time she had walked towards it; the enfolding, unexpected warmth and
fragrance of the garden — and she thought that if she was sent away again she
would not know how to bear it.
She was on the gravel drive
now and still she had encountered no one. Then as she reached the steps and put
down her suitcase, she knew with certainty that her quest would fail. Aunt
Frances hated refugees, she hated foreigners; she belonged to a bygone age. There
was no sanctuary here, no safety, no hope.
She could hear the clang of
the bell echoing inside the house. Would Turton even announce her, seeing her
state? She belonged at the back door or in one of those dark genre paintings of
banished women staggering out into the night.
The bolt was drawn back
slowly… so slowly that Ruth would have had time to turn away down the steps.
'Yes? What is it?'
It was not Turton who stood
there, not any of the servants. It was Aunt Frances herself, barring the way,
showing no welcome, no inclination to move aside - not even when she recognized
who it was that stood on her threshold.
'What on earth are you
doing here?' she went on, horrified. 'This is no place for you!'
Ruth drew breath, lifted
her head. Not I, but thou… She must fight for her child. But the words
she brought out were halting, inadequate; she was suddenly so exhausted that
she could hardly stand.
'Please… I beg you… Can I
stay?'
'Stay here! Stay here
in your condition! Really, Ruth, I know all foreigners are mad but this goes
beyond everything. Of course you can't stay.'
'There is an explanation… There
is a reason.'
'Explanations have nothing
to do with it. You can't stay here, absolutely and definitely not, and that's
the end of the matter.'
Ruth looked up at the gaunt
fierce woman she had nevertheless hoped was her friend. As she pulled her cloak
tighter, struck by a deathly cold, the first flakes of snow began to fall.
It had been Pilly's
ambition, when she joined the WRNS, to be employed as a cook, but the
third-class degree which made so little impression in academic circles secured
her a status she did not really seek. She was deployed as a driver and by the
end of November was carrying signals to and from the docks and senior naval
officers about their business.
But the officer she had
been asked to collect from the destroyer Vigilantes at an outlying
berth some ten miles from the base was a mere sublieutenant and it was better
not to ask why he rated a car or why the ship, supposedly on Atlantic convoys,
was being refitted in this obscure and inconveniently sited dock on the South
Coast. There were a lot of things one did not ask this first winter of the war.
It was a raw December
afternoon; the quay was deserted except for the two sailors guarding the
barrier, but Pilly, standing beside her car, waited contentedly. Her
instructions were clear; her passenger would come.
But when he did come, a
lone figure carrying a duffel bag, and she saluted, the result was unexpected.
'Good God, Pilly!' Quin
peered, moved closer in the dusk. 'It is you, isn't it?'
'Yes, sir.'
'Well, well, this is
amazing!' He threw his bag into the back and climbed into the front seat. 'I
had no idea you were in the same outfit. How do you like it?'
'I absolutely love it!'
Quin smiled at the
enthusiasm in her voice and at the change in the nervous girl who had peered so
sadly at her specimens. Pilly was slimmer, the uniform suited her, and as they
turned inland, he saw that she handled the big car with confidence and skill.
'My instructions are to
take you to the station,' she said, 'but it wouldn't take a minute to call in
at the mess if you wanted to pick up your mail?'
'No, thanks.'
The mail was of no interest
to him now. He had put a moratorium on his past life. In the forty-eight hours
before his next assignment, he was going down to a pub in Dorset to walk and
eat and sleep. Mostly to sleep.
'Janet's in the ATS,' Pilly
said, for she knew she must ask him nothing personal, 'though she's getting
married soon, and Huw is in the army. And Sam's going to join the RAF.'
Quin turned his head
sharply. 'He could have got deferment with a Science degree. I told him.'
'Yes - but he wanted to be
part of it. He really hates the Nazis and not just because he was so fond of
Ruth.'
She changed down and they
began to climb up the slope of the Downs. Well, it was inevitable that the girl
who had followed Ruth like a shadow, should mention her name. Impossible, now,
not to proceed.
'Have you heard from Ruth?'
'Yes, I have. I heard two
weeks ago.'
'And how does she like
America?'
No answer. They had reached
the top of the hill and she turned left between trees. Thinking she might need
to concentrate on the dark stretch of road, he waited, but when she still did
not answer, he repeated his question.
Pilly made up her mind. 'She
is not in America,' she said.
'You must be mistaken.' His
efforts to keep his voice neutral were only partly successful. 'She sailed with
Heini on the Mauretania at the end of July.'
'No, she didn't. Heini
sailed, but Ruth didn't. She told me in her letter.'
'Where is she, then?'
Another decision to make…
but this new and confident Pilly made it.
'She's somewhere in the
North of England working as a mother's help.'
'What! No, you must have
got that wrong.'
Pilly shook her head. 'I
haven't. And I'm very worried about her. I don't understand what's happening. She
keeps saying she's all right, but she isn't - I know she isn't. She's unhappy
and in a mess… and I think she's being silly.'
'What do you mean?'
Pilly, waiting at a
crossroads, tried to explain. 'I love Ruth,' she said. 'I really love her. It's
because of her I got my degree, but that isn't why. She made life… big for me. For
all of us. Important, not petty. But sometimes suddenly she'd behave like
someone in a book or an opera. Like she did when she was trying to give herself
to Heini. All that business about being like La Traviata or that girl
with a muff. Love isn't about operas,' said Pilly - and smiled for she had met
a petty officer who had promised to marry her and take her away from Science
for ever.
They had driven for several
minutes before Quin spoke again.
'Do you have her address?'
'No, I don't. She didn't
give it in her letter. That's why I think she's being someone in a book again. A
sort of Victorian heroine going out into the snow.' She glanced sideways at her
passenger. He had been a famous scientist and would, if he survived, most
probably be a hero with a medal, but he was still a man and the suspicion that
she and Janet had harboured could not be voiced to him. 'It's not because she
hasn't gone with Heini that I'm worried. Obviously she didn't love him and - '
'Really? That was not my
impression.'
God, don't let it start
again, he thought, looking out at the winter trees. There was no rage to call
on nowadays; just a relentless sense of bereavement lying below his conscious
thoughts as dark and heavy as stone.
'I'm going to try and find
her,' said Pilly. She had switched on the headlights; they were turning into
the road which led to the station. 'The trouble is, my next leave is not for
three months.'
'How can you find her
without an address?'
'I think she's in
Cumberland - the postmark looked as though it might be Keswick.' Pausing at a
traffic light, she turned to look at him. 'I've got the letter in my locker
back at headquarters, if you had time to look - you're good at deciphering
things. And if it is Keswick, that's not so far from Bowmont, is it? So
if you were going north - '
'But I'm not. I've got
exactly forty-eight hours and it takes a whole day now to go north, as you
know.'
Pilly sighed. Probably Dr
Elke had been wrong. Probably she herself was mistaken. 'If she was a
dinosaur's tooth you'd find her,' she said. 'And she isn't; she's Ruth.'
The car drew to a halt in
front of the station. Quin reached for his duffel bag - and dropped it back on
the seat.
'All right, Pilly, you win.
We'll go and look at your envelope.'
But when Pilly hurried back
to him in the hallway of the officers' mess carrying the letter, she saw that
Ruth's cause was lost. Quin was staring at a telegram in his hand and his face
was ashen.
'Thank God we called in
here,' he said. 'My aunt's been taken ill. I'll have to go to her at once.'
He handed her the message
which had been waiting with the Vigilantes' mail.
COME IMMEDIATELY WARD THREE
NEWCASTLE GENERAL HOSPITAL URGENT SOMERVILLE.
There was no chance to
sleep in the crowded, blacked-out train; nothing to eat or drink. There were
only the dragging hours in which to recall, in unsought detail, the services
his aunt had performed during her life and to realize the blow her death would
deal him.
They reached Newcastle at
ten in the morning and, still in his rumpled uniform, he snatched a few minutes
to wash and shave in the station cloakroom before jumping into a taxi. He'd
sent a cable before he left; giving his name at the hospital reception desk, he
was directed to the first floor.
As he entered the ward, the
Sister came towards him. 'Ah yes, we've been expecting you. It's not visiting
time, but I understand the circumstances are exceptional. I'll take you to your
aunt.'
Steeling himself to face
what awaited him, Quin followed her to the door of a small day room which she
opened.
Aunt Frances was not ill
and she was certainly not dead. As she saw him she rose and came towards him -
and she was laughing. Not the reluctant smile she occasionally allowed herself
at the foibles of mankind, but the full-bodied laughter of intense amusement.
'Oh, thank goodness!' She
embraced him, but her shoulders still shook. 'Only… don't worry,' she managed
to say. 'It's just a few days and then it'll disappear. He'll lose it
completely - isn't that so, Sister?'
Sister agreed that it was.
'Lose what?' said Quin,
completely bewildered.
'The resemblance. The
likeness. Oh dear, I wouldn't have believed it! Go and see! She's in the end
bed on the left.'
Walking in a dream, Quin
made his way up the ward. Girls were sitting up in bed, some talking, some
knitting - but all watching him as he passed.
Then suddenly there was
Ruth, her hair mantling her shoulders. Ruth as he remembered her… warm…
feminine; somehow both triumphant and unsure.
But he didn't go to her at
once. At the foot of the bed, as at the foot of all the beds, was a cot. And
inside it - lay Rear Admiral Basher Somerville.
The baby wasn't like
the Basher. It was the Basher - shrunk to size, a little more
crumpled, but identical. The Beethovian nose, the bucolic, livid face, the
double chin and pursed-up mouth.
Quin could not speak, only
stare - and his son moved his ancient, wrinkled head, one eye opened - a
fathomless, deep blue, lashless eye… the mouth twitched in a precursor of a
smile.
And Quin was undone. In an
instant, this being of whose existence he had been unaware five minutes
earlier, claimed him, body and soul. At the same time, he knew that he could
die now and it did not matter because the child was there and lived.
Only I must not hold him
back, he thought. He is himself. I swear that I will let him go.
Then he looked up at Ruth,
watching him in silence. But not her, he thought exultantly. Not her! I shall
never relinquish her - and he moved, half-blind, to the head of the bed, and
took her in his arms.
The Sister had said: 'Half
an hour, but no more, since you're on leave.' She had drawn the cold blue curtains
round the bed, but the lazy December sun touched them with gold. Inside was
Cleopatra's barge, was Venus' bower as Quin touched Ruth's face, her hair.
'I can't believe it. I
can't believe you could have been so stupid. I just wanted to give you something
lovely and priceless."
'I know… I was an idiot. I
think I didn't believe I should be happy when there was so much suffering in
the world. And there was Verena. She told everyone that you were taking her to
Africa.'
'Ah, yes. An unpleasant
woman. She's going to marry Kenneth Easton and teach him how to pronounce
Cholmondely, did you know?'
Ruth liked that. She liked
it a lot. But Quin was still shaken by the risk he had taken when she came to
him that night. 'When I think that you went through all that alone.'
'Well, actually I didn't,'
said Ruth a trifle bitterly. 'Not at the end. All I can say is that your aunt
may have left you alone but she certainly didn't leave me!'
And she described the
moment when Aunt Frances had appeared in the doorway at Bowmont, apparently
barring the way. 'She said I couldn't stay and I was desperate, but she meant I
couldn't stay in case we were cut off by the snow and the ambulance couldn't
get through. She just bundled me into the car and took me down to Mrs
Bainbridge's house in Newcastle and even when my parents came, she didn't let
me out of her sight. I think she was worried because of what happened to your
mother.' ;
Quin took one of her hands,
laced her fingers with his.
'Thank God for Aunt
Frances,' he said lightly - but he was still troubled by his carelessness that
night in Chelsea. Or was it carelessness? Would he have believed any other
woman as he had believed Ruth? Hadn't he wanted, at one level, to be committed
as irrevocably as now he was?
But Ruth was asking a question,
holding on to him rather hard in case it was unjustified.
'Quin, when you give
Bowmont to the Trust, do you think it might be possible to keep just one very
small - '
'When I do what?'
said Quin, thunderstruck.
'Give Bowmont to the Trust.
You see - '
'Give it to the Trust?
Are you mad? Ruth, you have seen that baby - you have seen the fists on him. Do
you seriously think I'd dare to give away his home?'
Ruth seemed to find this
funny. She found it very funny, and her remarks about the British upper classes
were so uncomplimentary that Quin, slightly offended, prepared to seal her lips
with a kiss. But when he'd cleared away her hair to obtain a better access, he
found that her brow was furrowed by a new anxiety.
'Quin,' she said into his
ear, 'I seem to have become a mother rather quickly, but I want so much to be…
you know… a proper loveress. The kind that wiggles gentleman's cigars to see
that the tobacco is all right and knows about claret.'
He was entirely shaken, not
least by the way that her adopted language had suddenly deserted her.
'Oh God, you shall be, my
darling. You shall be a loveress to knock Cleopatra into a cocked hat. You are
already! We shall love each other on beds and barges, in bowers of lilies and
on the Orient Express. It owes us, that train!'
He drew her closer, feeling
that never again would he have enough of her, and at that moment the child
began to cry. At once he loosed his hold, schooled himself. He must relinquish
her though soon he would leave her, perhaps for ever. He must take second place
for that was the law of life.
But it was not her law. He
felt her responding to the thin, high wail… felt the cord that bound her to the
child - and would bind her till she died - draw tighter. But when she stretched
out her hand, it was to press the bell beside the bed.
'Would you take him to the
nursery just for a little while?' she asked the nurse who came. 'He can't be
hungry yet and my husband doesn't have… very long.'
It seemed to him then that
she had given him a pledge of which he must be worthy as long as they both
lived - and as he laid his head against her cheek, he felt her tears.
'Quin… about swimming…'
'Yes?'
'I mean, you're good at it,
aren't you? Very good? So whatever happens, even if… I mean, it's only the
Atlantic or the Pacific. It's only an ocean. You'll just keep on
swimming, won't you? Because wherever you land, on whatever shore or island or
coral reef, I'll be there waiting. I swear it, Quin. I swear by Mozart's head.'
It was a moment before he
could trust his voice to do his bidding. Then he said: 'Of course. You can
absolutely rely on it. After all, it isn't as though I'll be wearing a
rucksack.'
And then they held each
other quietly until it was time for him to go.
It was a day of extraordinary
beauty: a day that perfectly matched the mood of Britain's citizens as they
celebrated the end of the war in Europe. The soft blue sky was cloudless, the
May-green trees spread their canopy of tender leaves. Strangers embraced each
other, children feasted; bonfires were lit - and in the bombed squares round St
Paul's, the people danced.
There were some, of course,
who preferred to rejoice without external displays of agitation. At Bowmont,
Frances and Uncle Mishak spent the day working in the garden and arguing about
the asparagus bed. The need to feed the populace had enabled Mishak to plant
asparagus in a place under the south wall which Frances now wanted to reclaim
for her day lilies. Not that the outcome was in doubt for a moment: everyone
who worked at Bowmont knew that the bandy-legged old gentleman who seldom spoke
could twist Miss Somerville round his little finger.
But in the Willow Tea
Rooms, everything was carnival and joy. Ruth had intended to celebrate V-E Day
at Bowmont, but her son had different ideas.
'I think I ought to go to
London and see the King and Queen,' he said.
Questioned further, the
five-year-old Jamie said he thought that they had done well to stay at
Buckingham Palace throughout the bombing, and to keep visiting the troops, and
he wanted to tell them so.
'But, darling, there'll be
thousands and thousands of people there waiting for them to come onto the
balcony. You won't be able to see them alone.'
James said he didn't mind. A
handsome child with dark eyes and his mother's light, abundant hair, he had
retained only one feature from his great-grandfather: the Basher's iron and
indomitable will.
So they went to London and
where James went there went his little sister, Kate - and once it was clear
that this was to be a grand reunion, Ruth accepted the offer of Miss Maud and
Miss Violet of a party in the Willow. London was really one great party that
halcyon May day - there were trestle tables out on the pavements of Belsize
Square and Belsize Lane and Belsize Avenue, so why not in the Willow - and Mrs
Burtt, though she was very grand now (a floor manager in the munitions factory)
had offered to come with her son, Trevor, and lend a hand.
All the same Mrs Weiss,
arriving in the cafe, was not at all pleased.
'Mein Gott,' she
said disgustedly. 'So many children!'
There were a lot of
children. Six years of war had had a startling effect on the birth rate. Dr
Felton and his twins had joined Professor Berger and Jamie in the expedition to
Buckingham Palace, but Janet, up from the country, had deposited her pugilistic
two-year-old so that she could go and look at the crowds. Dr Levy, now a
consultant at Hampstead Hospital, was on duty, but his new young wife was
rocking their infant daughter while Thisbe - back from Cumberland - trotted at
Ruth's heels. And sitting on Leonie's lap, surveying the uproar from the safety
of her grandmother's embrace, was Katy Somerville.
'So that is why the
Lutzenholler has not come,' said Mrs Weiss grimly, manoeuvring herself on two
sticks to her usual table by the hat stand and taking out her horsehair purse,
for it was only by pretending that this was an ordinary session in the cafe
that she could endure what was going on;
But she maligned the
psychoanalyst. That people could actually pay good money to bring their
troubles to the soup slayer of Belsize Park continued to surprise everyone, but
it was so. Established in a smart area of St John's Wood, she was even on this
historic day attending to patients who could not face the world without a
session on her couch.
There were other absentees
- von Hofmann had said Schweinehund to such effect that he now said it
in Hollywood and the lady with the poodle nursed a shivering Chihuahua for the
poodle had succumbed to old age. But almost everyone else was there and Ruth,
in her role of waitress, was kept busy running to and fro.
'And Pilly?' asked Leonie,
as her daughter passed with Janet's baby on her hip and a tray of cakes. 'Is
she coming?'
'She said she'd try. Sam's
picking her up in Portsmouth. Only Mama, you musn't matchmake!'
'Why musn't I?' asked
Leonie, who was convinced that the growing attachment of Sam and Pilly could be
laid at her door. She had kept open house for all Ruth's friends on the top
floor of Number 27 which she had turned into a comfortable flat. The year when
Pilly's petty officer had been lost at sea and Huw was killed at Alamein had
been a hard one, and she had seen for herself how well those two would suit.
She took a cake from Ruth's
tray and pressed it into the hand of her granddaughter. The anxieties that Ruth
and Quin felt about letting their children go forth in freedom had not affected
Leonie. Children, perhaps: grandchildren, no.
But at three o'clock Ruth
handed the baby to Miss Maud and went upstairs to keep a tryst with the four
men who all through the war had travelled, clad in the khaki of the Pioneers,
to bring music to soldiers in outlying barracks, to tired office workers and
housewives in the Blitz… and who today were performing in a ruined church in a
ravaged city in England's heartland to celebrate the peace.
She turned the knob of the
wireless, and they were playing the Schubert Quartet which she had heard that
night at Thameside when she believed a miracle had happened and Biberstein was,
after all, alive.
And yet… Perhaps, it had
occurred, this miracle. It was the chauffeur from Northumberland who now took
the melody from Ziller, but as the ravishing, transcendent music filled the
room, Ruth seemed to see a plump and curly-headed figure who leant out from
heaven and lifted the bow of his Amati in salute - and smiled.
Making her way back into
the cafe through the kitchen, she checked on the threshold and her hand went to
her heart. He was coming! He hadn't been sure if he could get away, but here he
was walking across the square, and she knew that there could be no greater
happiness in the wide world than seeing him come like this towards her.
But others had noted the
arrival of Commander Somer-ville. Katy slid off Leonie's knee and came to pluck
at her mother's skirt; even the children fell silent. Ruth had not thought it
necessary to keep her husband's exploits to herself. Everyone knew that the
circles of gold braid on his sleeve denoted an ever-increasing eminence; that
he had been twice torpedoed; that he had housed twelve Jewish orphans and an
experimental sheep at Bowmont and been awarded the DSO.
For such a hero something
was due and Mrs Weiss was against the hothouse family embrace she could see
developing. Stilling Ruth with a wave of the hand, she manoeuvred herself to
her feet - and as Quin entered, she pointed at him with her rubber-tipped
walking stick.
'I buy you a cake?' said
Mrs Weiss.