Emergency in the Pyrenees

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Emergency in the Pyrenees Page 1

by Ann Bridge




  EMERGENCY IN THE PYRENEES

  By

  ANN BRIDGE

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 1

  ‘A baby? Oh my dearest child, I am so glad’ Mrs. Hathaway said; she rose from her chair and went across and gave Julia a warm kiss. ‘Now I shall have a great-godchild!’ she said happily. ‘When is it due?’

  ‘Early November’ Julia Jamieson replied.

  ‘Oh well, winter babies in London always do well’ said the old lady, cheerfully. ‘So extraordinary—they seem positively to thrive on fog and smoke! Where shall you have it? In a hospital?’

  ‘No—here, I thought’ Julia said, in her slow calm tones. ‘I never feel sure that with what they call “hospitalised births”; you get your own baby back! Anyhow, a baby ought to be born under its own Father’s roof, among people who care—not tended by anonymous nurses, with gauze masks over their faces!’

  ‘Have you got room here?’ Mrs. Hathaway asked. This conversation was taking place in the Jamiesons’ flat in Gray’s Inn.

  ‘Oh yes, heaps. Philip did manage to get his old Uncle’s set of chambers just below this, and we had a lift put in; I’ve had lovely day and night nurseries arranged, with their own bathroom, complete with washing-machine!—it ought all to be perfectly easy. The nannie can bring the baby up in the lift to be nursed.’

  ‘Oh, I am glad that you mean to nurse it yourself. Young women today don’t realise what they miss by not doing that’ the old lady said. ‘There is a completely different relationship between a mother and child with breast-fed babies, compared to those that are bottled from the start.’

  ‘Is there really?’

  ‘Oh yes—psychologically, breast-feeding has some profound effect. And not a bad one!’ Mrs. Hathaway said energetically. ‘All this modern nonsense that it is injurious for children to love their mothers! How can there be too much affection in the world?’ But soon the old lady began doing sums on her fingers.

  ‘November—and here we are in June. Where shall you be during the summer? London can be rather hot and tiring then.’

  ‘Well that’s rather the question’ Julia said. ‘Philip has got one of these tiresome assignments abroad for July and August, and perhaps longer. So I had thought of going up to Glentoran to stay with Edina and her Philip, while mine has to be away.’

  ‘An excellent plan. You shouldn’t be here alone, in the heat.’

  ‘But my Philip has another plan’ Julia went on.

  ‘What is that?’

  ‘Well his other Uncle had a little house up in the Pyrenees—just an old farmhouse, which he converted and made quite comfortable; Philip used to spend a lot of his holidays there, and adored it. The old boy left it to him when he died, and Philip let it to some friends, the Stansteds—and they have offered to lend it to us this summer, for me to stay. Philip thinks it a perfect idea—he says living in the Pyrenees will have a good pre-natal effect on the baby’ Julia said, with an amused burbling laugh.

  Mrs. Hathaway was not amused.

  ‘What is this place called?’ she asked.

  ‘Larége.’

  The old lady got up and pulled The Times Atlas out of the shelf where Philip Jamieson kept his innumerable maps; she opened it, and studied it.

  ‘But my dear child, Larége is miles up in the mountains!—a long way off the main road to that pass’—she opened her bag, took out a tortoiseshell-mounted magnifying glass, and studied the map afresh. ‘The Grandpont Pass’ she pronounced. ‘I don’t think you ought to go there unless you have someone with you’ she said firmly. ‘And can one get servants?’

  ‘Oh, Philip says all that is quite easy’ Julia responded cheerfully. At that point Philip Jamieson himself walked in. He kissed Mrs. Hathaway and his wife, called to Buchan to bring drinks, and presently asked—‘What have you two been gossiping about?’

  ‘Julia’s baby.’ Mrs. Hathaway chose to reply herself. ‘First, dear Philip, all possible congratulations; I am so glad.’

  ‘Nice, isn’t it?’ Colonel Jamieson said. ‘I’m longing for children—I should like to have a whole string of them! We reckon Julia has time for about six, reasonably spaced.’

  ‘And does Julia want six?’ Mrs. Hathaway asked, rather crisply.

  ‘If Philip will provide a large house in the country, with ample staff and endless ponies, I shouldn’t mind having six a bit’ Julia said. ‘I don’t think children ought to be brought up in a city after about two years old—however healthy you may say London is, Mrs. H.! But I don’t suppose actually having them is anything to worry about; and I don’t.’

  Mrs. Hathaway had her own views on this, and presently reverted to her earlier questions about Julia’s summer plans.

  ‘If Julia is to stay at this house in the Pyrenees, while you are quite out of reach in the Middle East or somewhere, will she be able to get servants locally?—what I believe is now called “help”?’

  ‘Oh, I imagine so. The last time I stayed with the Stansteds, a couple of years ago, everything seemed to run perfectly smoothly.’

  In fact Philip Jamieson, manlike, had never enquired as to how this smooth running had been achieved; he and Arthur Stansted spent most of their days out walking and climbing, and he did not in the least realise that all the work of the house had in fact been done by Mrs. Stansted herself and a very willing and domestically skilled step-daughter. ‘The Stansteds thought Julia might like to go and stay with them for a couple of days before they leave, to be shown the ropes’ he said comfortably—‘and of course it’s no distance from Pau.’

  ‘That is a good idea’ Mrs. Hathaway said. But the name Pau struck a chord in her mind—a slightly reassuring one.

  ‘The Heriots live just outside Pau’ she said. ‘They might come in handy.’

  ‘Who are the Heriots?’ Philip asked, without any real interest; he was confident that his romantic, and really rather foolish plan was completely sound.

  ‘Oh, Lord and Lady Heriot. They are one of those old Anglo-French Pau families, who started the fox-hounds and the golf-course and all that. Such an interesting little bit of colonialisation in Europe,’ the old lady replied.

  ‘The fox-hounds were pretty good, I always heard’ Philip said; ‘but I hadn’t realised that they were started by the British.’

  ‘My dear Philip, can you see the French starting a pack of foxhounds in the Pyrenees?’ Mrs. Hathaway asked. ‘Well, I shall write to Lady Heriot—I haven’t seen her for years, but I believe they have grown-up children, who might come in useful to Julia.’

  ‘Mrs. H., why are you fussing? It is a charming house, and a heavenly place. And anyhow Colin will be about.’

  Julia pricked up her ears at this mention of her cousin.

  ‘Colin? Why should he be about out there?’ Philip became cautious.

  ‘Oh well, various things to keep an eye on.’

  ‘In the Pyrenees?’ Julia sounded incredulous.

  ‘Well there and thereabouts.’

  ‘Oh Philip, don’t be tiresome! There’s only me and Mrs. H. here. What?’

  ‘Well I suppose even you have heard of Lacq, the great gas-field just north of the Pyrenees; it supplies something like one-third of France’s gas, and no sabotage is wanted there.’

  ‘Who’d want to sabotage Lacq? No, never mind,’ Julia corrected herself hastily. ‘
Where else?’

  ‘Well most saboteurs, whether Communist or O.A.S., come in to France from Spain across the frontier; so it, and Jaca and Pamplona are places to watch too. And of course Bordeaux is both a sea-port and an air-port, so anyone might try to get in there. But none of this concerns you in the least’ Philip added breezily—‘except that it means that Colin will probably want to take a bed off you at Larége most week-ends.’

  ‘Oh, do saboteurs always take the week-end off?’ Mrs. Hathaway enquired with false innocence. Philip beamed on the keen-witted old lady.

  ‘You precious Mrs. H.! If you were even five years younger I should try to recruit you into Intelligence at once!’ (It was typical of Philip Jamieson’s ‘sweet blood’, as George Meredith called it, that he should be so totally unresentful of having his bluff called.) ‘No—saboteurs work round the clock! But Colin will have colleagues—anyhow he will never be far away.’

  ‘And will Julia have addresses and telephone numbers for him?’ Mrs. Hathaway pursued, relentlessly—quite rightly, as it proved, she distrusted her godson-in-law about practical matters, his profession apart.

  ‘Oh, Colin will see to all that’ Philip replied, still breezy. ‘And there are the Monniers, who have a house there, and go every summer—the nicest people. He was in the Resistance—I knew him rather well at one time. But it is such a heavenly place—I’m sure Julia will adore it.’

  Mrs. Hathaway remained doubtful; ex-Resistance French neighbours did not reassure her very much. What she wanted for her precious Julia during her first pregnancy—at thirty-two—was the presence of some reliable person in the house, and a reasonable amount of domestic help. ‘Well, I shall write to Lady Heriot’ she said.

  She did so—and the affectionate reply from her long-neglected friend was not reassuring. The Heriots’ only off-spring were twin sons, one at Oxford, the other at Cambridge. ‘That’s no use whatever’ Mrs. Hathaway said to Julia, when she took the letter from Pau round to Gray’s Inn. ‘Now if they’d had a daughter, she might have been.’ Lady Heriot further stated that she did not think it at all easy to get any sort of maid-servant at Larége in the summer—‘It is getting nearly as bad as in England; the girls all go to the hotels at Oloron and so on, in the towns; and anyhow the Larégeois are wild, wicked people, half-Moors.’

  ‘Why on earth should they be half Moors?’ Julia asked. ‘Does she say?’

  ‘No. But my dear child, do think carefully about this. There is the child to consider.’

  Julia did consider the child, particularly under the impact of all this discouraging information. For herself, she always adored adventure and new places, and Larége beckoned strongly; Philip loved it, he wanted her to go there; she was deeply in love, and wished to do what he wished. But she had a strong respect for Mrs. Hathaway’s judgment; and pregnancy and motherhood were things of which she had no experience. Perhaps she ought to have a companion in the house. She bethought her of an existing daughter, the Duke of Ericeira’s; her former pupil, who had so recently come over from Portugal to be the only bridesmaid at her wedding.

  ‘I think I’ll write to Luzia’ she said.

  ‘Do,’ said Mrs. Hathaway—‘if you are really set on going.’ The old lady had encountered Luzia during her brief stay in England, and had formed a good opinion of her, in spite of her remarkable beauty—great beauty, Mrs. Hathaway had decided from lifelong experience, was more apt to be a liability than an asset. But in this case—‘I think she is trustworthy’ she said. ‘Do try to get her. Write tonight.’

  Julia’s renewal of her acquaintance with Luzia Ericeira had been happier than is always the case in such circumstances. The girl whom she had left at little more than sixteen, already with a strong promise of beauty, had reappeared after three years with that promise fulfilled in a restrained, but complete, splendour—white skin, dark hair, Celtic-grey eyes, and a now faultlessly-modelled structure to a noble face; there was nothing chocolate-boxy about such beauty, it was classical and pure. But what had pleased Julia most was that her ex-pupil, always intelligent and gay, was now more gay and more intelligent than ever, and she had pursued her studies; she had forced her reluctant Father to let her take a two-years’ course at the Sorbonne in Paris.

  ‘Why the Sorbonne?’ Julia had asked.

  ‘Oh well, Papa thought it might be rather embarrassing to have me as a student at Coimbra—and anyhow the Sorbonne is tops for theology.’

  ‘You shouldn’t say “tops”, Luzia’ Julia said, the ex-governess in her coming out in spite of herself.

  ‘No? I thought one said it, now.’

  They both laughed, then—the past brought back so close, and its absurdity in the present. Julia asked why Luzia had wanted to read theology, and the girl explained.

  ‘All this questioning, today, about the truth of Christianity—even your Bishops doubting! So I thought I would learn the answers before I went into society, and was pestered with questions. Truly, Miss Probyn, I do not believe that these little modern men know more, or are better Christians, than St. Thomas Aquinas. He was a scholar; these, to me, do not write as scholars!’

  Julia agreed, though she was less concerned with Christian truths than Luzia; but they had renewed their early friendship, now on adult and equal terms, with increased warmth. She had no hesitation in writing to ask Luzia if she would come and stay with her at Larége for six or seven weeks, in August and September—‘No idea how comfortable it will be.’

  Mrs. Hathaway was delighted to have Luzia’s acceptance read out to her in Gray’s Inn. ‘What fun to see the Pyrenees! And is it not so very far from Lourdes? I have always so much wanted to go to Lourdes. Shall you have a car?’

  Julia had in fact wanted to take her car, but Philip, who had the oddest ideas about pregnancies—based on complete ignorance—opposed the plan. ‘You won’t need a car—you can always hire the taxi from Labielle if you want it. But you hardly ever will; Larége isn’t a car sort of place’—and Julia, in her love-lorn folly, again gave way. Luzia, on learning this, thought of bringing her own car; now it was the Duque who objected. Continentals are much more allergic to carnets and triptyques than the ever travelling English—‘And where would the chauffeur stay?’ Luzia also gave way; in spite of the Sorbonne, she had not yet quite reached the stage of thinking it normal to drive about Europe without a chauffeur. But about one thing she was firm—mistakenly, as it proved.

  ‘No, Papa, I will not take my maid. I shall not need her—and I think the house is not large. For six weeks I can wash my own clothes, and do my own hair. This is a village in the Pyrenees, not a resort of fashion.’

  Since Julia was to stay with the Stansteds to be ‘shown the ropes’at Larége, it was settled that Luzia should only join her a few days later. Julia flew to Bordeaux, and went on to Pau by train—a train so crammed with pilgrims bound for Lourdes that movement through the corridors was impossible; the restaurant-car might as well not have existed. Also it was intensely hot. Julia, tired, thirsty, and regretting her improvidence in not having bought mineral-water at Bordeaux, sat resignedly in a corner of the carriage, looking out of the window. Presently her attention was attracted by a curious sight—an enormous range of mostly rather low buildings, studded here and there with large balloon-like shapes of aluminium, gleaming silvery in the sun, and towering over all four immensely lofty chimneys, from which plumes of red flame and dark smoke streamed out into the sky.

  ‘Good Gracious!’ Julia exclaimed, and sat upright to study this phenomenon. A small nattily-dressed Frenchman, aroused by her exclamation, got up and went over to the windows.

  ‘Ah, voilà Lacq!’ he said. ‘Madame, it is from here that France gets, now, almost half her supply of gas—from below the earth!’

  Julia asked what the aluminium balloons were for? Her new acquaintance couldn’t tell her that, but he knew the use of the tall chimneys. ‘In the gas, in its natural state, there are impurities; these, by some complicated process, are separated, leaving the g
as pure to be carried by pipe-lines all over France—but there is a certain surplus of pressure which passes into these chimneys to burn itself away in the upper air.’

  Julia listened with interest; she wished that her informant could have told her more about the complicated processes. But as the chimneys, with their black-and-red plumes of smoke and flame receded, she felt that it was not surprising that no sabotage was wanted here, and that Colin, her dear Colin, should have been laid on to help to guard the source of this strange product from the bowels of the earth from evil-doers.

  At last they reached Pau. Mrs. Hathaway, concerned at the whole idea of this journey, had arranged with Lady Heriot that Julia should be met, spend the night with them, and be driven up to Larége the following day. This was just as well, for Pau is unusually ill-provided with porters, even for a French provincial station, and Julia had a certain amount of luggage. She had managed to battle her way through the pilgrims thronging the corridor to the door of the coach, and stood there as the train drew in, looking for a porter, and seeing none. But Mrs. Hathaway had also taken the precaution of describing her god-daughter—‘She’s quite unmistakeable: tall, and very beautiful, with a golden skin and deep gold hair, and big grey eyes.’ This, evidently, had registered with her hosts; as the train slowed down two tall fair young men, precisely alike, ran along beside it, and jumped onto the step below Julia’s tall figure even before the engine came to a halt.

  ‘Mrs. Jamieson? Good. Where’s your stuff? Any in the van?’

  ‘No, all in my carriage; third along, and all labelled—red labels.’

  ‘Fine. Dick, you go in and hand it out to me. Let me help you down, Mrs. Jamieson—these steps are so infernally high.’

  They were indeed—Julia was thankful for a hand to get her down them. Once safely on the platform she was greeted by a grey-haired gentleman, as short as his sons were tall.

  ‘Mrs. Jamieson? Heriot is my name. Clever of you to get to the door. These wretched pilgrims are a perfect nuisance, God help them—they clog the trains just like that new water-weed is beginning to choke the Nile! Now let’s come along to where Nick is, and check what Dick hands out, to make sure that you get all your gear.’

 

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