The Japanese Girl

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The Japanese Girl Page 19

by Winston Graham


  ‘Here, let me.’ Kendrick knelt down and gave Clamp a hoist. Clamp arrived at the top of the wall, balancing precariously like Humpty-Dumpty; he lent a hand, and with its help Kendrick joined him. A black chasm yawned.

  ‘It’s a bit farther this side,’ Clamp panted.

  But the Head was pushing his way through the shrubbery. They jumped, landed on all fours in muddy earth. Clamp managed to get up first. Again he gave Kendrick a hand, and then they both made off like thieves towards the lights at the end of the lane.

  After a minute Kendrick said: ‘ I don’t think he was near enough to recognize us.’

  ‘Not you, certainly,’ gasped Clamp. ‘But I’ve met him two or three times. It would be damned undignified to be caught out like that!’

  As Kendrick remembered this lane it led to another which ran beside a stream into the little town; but when they came out he stared about in surprise. A town street brightly lighted; the stream had disappeared; modern villas lined the road, and then shops.

  ‘It’s a bit different since our time, Kendrick,’ Clamp said. ‘The school’s practically surrounded these days.’

  They stood there regaining their breath and brushing themselves down. Kendrick’s ear felt too big for his face, and Clamp’s nose had been bleeding. After a minute Clamp hesitantly raised a hand and began to brush down the back of Kendrick’s coat. They were thick with dirt and leaves.

  ‘What time’s your train, Kendrick?’

  ‘Six-forty. If I turn left here it’ll lead to the station, won’t it?’

  ‘Yes. I’m coming that way, too.’

  They walked off together in silence. Clamp dabbed his nose. He grunted and hesitated once or twice and then said: ‘Don’t know what got into me just now, Kendrick. Seeing you after all this time, it just bubbled up. And the way you treated it, as if it was a joke.’

  ‘Well,’ said Kendrick, his good humour never far away, ‘I must say I didn’t come back expecting anything like this!’

  They walked down the street into the town.

  ‘I remember this part now,’ Kendrick said. ‘That’s the old bookshop, isn’t it. And the place where they sold those hot buns.’

  ‘They were first-class, weren’t they.’

  ‘Yes, Clamp, it all comes back.’

  ‘Remember what a row there was that time Johnson was caught smoking in the White Hart?’

  ‘Good Lord, yes.’

  Clamp brushed a last bit of moss from his lapel. ‘ Maybe you’ve time for a cup of tea, Kendrick? What time does your train go? Oh, yes, you’ve told me. Well, there’s half an hour yet.’

  They had stopped outside a tea-shop.

  ‘Well, I really should be getting along.’ All this horseplay had touched up the rheumatism in Kendrick’s shoulder. ‘I can get something at the station.’

  ‘Nonsense; I owe you that, at least. I’ve got to go in here and a cup of tea will do us both good. Come along, my dear fellow. I insist.’

  Kendrick hesitated and then gave way. At the door of the shop they each waited for the other. ‘ No,’ said Clamp heartily. ‘You first, Kendrick; you’re my senior by three months.’

  They went in. The shop was crowded, but Clamp led the way clumsily but unerringly to a corner table at which sat a plump, grey-haired lady.

  ‘Darling,’ he said nervously, ‘ sorry I’m late. I bumped into an old school-friend of mine up there. Name of Henry Kendrick. Wonder if you’ll remember him. Kendrick, may I introduce you to my wife. Perhaps you’ll remember her better under her maiden name of Veronica Fry.’

  I Had Known Sam Taylor For Years

  I had known Sam Taylor for years but never closely, for we really had nothing whatever in common. As a member of my club, he was often in and out, and we spoke sometimes; but really we belonged to different sets. D’you know. He was a journalist, partly free-lance, and therefore led a precarious life, sometimes in the money, when he spent lavishly and drank himself stupid, more often on the verge of being broke, when he wasn’t above touching his friends. Hail-fellow-well-met. I never actually disliked him because he was too unimportant to rouse any strong feeling either way, and at his best he was boisterously witty. He played snooker well, usually with a long cigar wobbling between his yellow teeth; and I do not play at all. He couldn’t stand bridge and this is my great recreation. By profession I am a solicitor, and I am known in the art world.

  So. Until one day I was at lunch, concentrating on a particularly succulent fillet steak, which had followed a sole veronique, which had followed a smoked trout, when the scrape of a chair beside me and the careless slumping manner in which the newcomer sat down gave me an inkling that Sam Taylor had come to take a place at the table.

  He was about forty-eight at the time but looked considerably older. He was a rickety figure of a man, very dark, with hair streaked across to hide a bald patch, a thin red face, handsome twinkling black eyes and a thin bulbous nose which a friend once compared – not unjustly – to the end of a garden thermometer.

  ‘Oh, Wilfred, just the laddie I wanted to see.’ That was the way he talked. What sort of Queen’s English he wrote I never attempted to imagine.

  I chewed for a moment, savouring the flavours, before answering. His tone, the extra friendliness, suggested that he might want to ask for a loan, but even he would not essay it at the luncheon table. And anyway he knew better from past experience than to ask me.

  ‘Well, you see me,’ I said, ‘so your day is made.’

  ‘Very well expressed.’ He chuckled and studied the menu. ‘Very well expressed. And it could be true. Depends all on your goodwill, Wilfred. I know you’re a generous character. Wouldn’t refuse a friend. I’ll have a ham omelette and chip potatoes and some peas, Alice, dear.’

  I winced at his free and easy manner with the waitress and at the nature of his order – what was the good of pressing for improved catering standards for the club when there were people like him about – and my depression deepened when the wine waitress came and he asked for a large whisky and soda.

  ‘I have been known to refuse even an enemy,’ I said.

  ‘Ah, well, it’s that hard legal side, that big legal brain at work. That’s not what I want of you, Wilfred, dear boy. It’s another sort of favour altogether. And I come to you because you’re the best man we’ve got in the Hanover Club – on art and furniture and things that fetch money these days in the salerooms.’

  I sipped my Chambolle Musigny and said nothing. I wondered if this were a cunning attempt to please me, for I am only an amateur in the world of the big salerooms, and we had two or three professionals in the club. Nevertheless, I am well informed, and enjoy nothing better than to use my knowledge, and he knew it.

  His whisky came and he took a gulp. ‘You know I’ve never owned anything worth a tinker’s cuss: I live in a modern flat on my tod, and when the cash comes in it’s the basic necessities of life that claim it. But an old aunt has just rattled off in Hendon and left me a house full of stuff. I don’t think there’s anything much there, but you never know these days, and I wouldn’t want to make a bloomer and let something good slip through my fingers,’

  I finished my steak and asked for the Stilton. ‘What have you done about it?’

  ‘Well, I’ve had the local people in, and they’ve itemized and listed everything. I’ve got the inventory in my pocket if you’d like to see it.’

  ‘No, thank you.’

  ‘They say it’s pretty well all poor stuff and had best go to the local salerooms. They think it will fetch about six or seven hundred pounds in total. But there’s one thing here.’ He fished a sheaf of paper out of his pocket. ‘ They say: ‘‘Two French watercolours of the Seine by Walter Parr, dated and signed 1912. Could be valuable and suggest expert valuation.’’ D’you know him, Wilfred?’

  ‘No … I know a painter called Carr, but I don’t believe he ever left England. At least, one has never seen …’

  He began to tuck into his omelette. ‘What I w
ondered, laddie, was whether you’d care to come up and have a decco at these pictures for yourself?’

  The Stilton came, and this gave me an opportunity to consider the matter while I dug into it. There was absolutely no reason why I should give this shambling man the free benefit of my wide experience, and the obvious response was a curt refusal. But I always greatly enjoy looking around old houses and old furniture. It has always been my hope that one of these days I shall make a real discovery, something that will startle the world and profit myself; but so far it has never occurred. Once in my early days as a collector I had bought a fine tea set of Coalport china with 1754 stamped on the bottom of each piece, and bought it cheap, only to discover that the 1754 stamp proved it had been made after 1880. Once in a shop in York I had unearthed a Cox watercolour which fetched in the auction rooms six times what I gave. Once I had found a Charles II pewter mug in an old cottage in Kent. But these and a half dozen other minor successes and failures only whetted the appetite for more.

  ‘You can get a man from Sotheby’s,’ I said. ‘They’ll send a man up with pleasure.’

  ‘I never trust these people. Before you –’

  ‘They’re just as trustworthy as I am, and they know far more about it.’

  ‘Well, why don’t you come and have a decco first? It’s only a taxi ride.’

  ‘I’m a busy man. I have very little free time.’

  ‘Oh, come off it, Wilfred. You’re always in the salerooms. I’d trust you to go over this stuff and pick out anything valuable before I would any of these pros.’

  ‘Flattery will do nothing for you,’ I said. And in fact I was not at all flattered by his obvious wish to obtain my advice. It was too transparent altogether. Yet he was a member of my club, and he was the sort of rash, slapdash fool to let something good slip through his fingers for the sake of making sure. And Walter Parr? One had never heard of the man. These local valuers were noted for their carelessness. But if it were Carr, would that be much of a find? I doubted if Sotheby’s would even be interested …

  ‘What else is there in the house?’ I said.

  ‘A lot of furniture. Some rugs. A few more pictures. It’s a shambles, laddie. The old girl was eighty, and I doubt if she had had a good turn out for fifty years.’

  He gobbled through his lunch, so that we finished together. Downstairs he bought me a vintage port and showed me the inventory. One could tell nothing from it.

  When I handed it back to him he said: ‘Doing anything this afternoon?’

  I stared at him. ‘My dear fellow, I am not a free-lance like you!’

  ‘Well, I only thought. It would take no time in a taxi. Buzz up and buzz back. Actually, I promised these people a reply in the morning. They want to take the lot off my hands.’

  It happened that though I was expected back at my office I had no appointments, except one that I wished to avoid. I had intended to be ‘not in’ when my client called – since I knew he came only laden with trivial time-wasting complaints. It might be more effective if I were really out, called away on important business. I stared at Taylor, who just then was exchanging foolish badinage with another member who came to lean over his chair. When they had finished he turned and grinned at me and dropped a half-inch of ash from his cigar on to my shoe.

  ‘How about it, Wilfred? Be a sport?’

  ‘An hour,’ I said. ‘At the most I can spare one hour.’

  TWO

  In the event it took far longer, as I suppose I should have anticipated. But indeed all my reckonings were confounded right at the outset by Sam Taylor’s behaviour.

  He flagged down a taxi outside the club, muttered something to the driver and we both climbed in. I am a man of considerable size, and taxis these days are not so accommodating as they were. We jerked casually through a dozen traffic lights, Taylor expatiating unnecessarily on my good fellowship; and then suddenly the cab stopped on the corner of a street and Taylor opened the door.

  ‘Are we there?’ I said. ‘ You told me –’

  ‘No, but I thought it a bonne idée if we stopped en route. Can’t do this sort of thing unless one does it en prince.’

  I started to protest, but he was pulling me to get out, and I saw that we were at a public house half-way up Tottenham Court Road. We could not have been moving five minutes, and I was very irritable at being led into a public bar, where Sam ordered himself a double whisky and prevailed on me to take a brandy.

  I accepted it in injured silence and thought about my wife while Sam joked with the barmaid and consumed his whisky in two swallows and ordered another one and drank that before I had properly inhaled the fumes of the brandy. I suspected that he did not take drink for the pleasure of drinking but merely for its ultimate effect on him.

  Eventually we returned to the waiting taxi and were off again. When we started Taylor insisted on telling me some rambling story of his journalistic life, and I regretted more than ever the foolish impulse which had persuaded me to come. Suddenly the taxi stopped again, and with sinking heart I saw another public house offering its synthetic welcome. To my protests Sam returned that ‘they’ would soon be closed, and it was essential to lay in a good foundation before the desert of the afternoon began. So in we went again and the pattern was precisely repeated: he taking two double whiskies to my one brandy.

  I am not familiar with all the licensing hours of north London, but it fell out, by what means I do not know, that we found three more public houses open, proceeding in a series of erratic moves, until we reached Hendon. My friend Sam had a singular ability to take drink without apparent effect; but I must confess that on coming out of the last public house we both stumbled over a step that was not there.

  And so at last the quarry we had all this time been seeking. A tall semi-detached, built, I would have thought, about the turn of the century, and grey with dirt and time. Sam took a little while to find the key, and afterwards a little while to find the keyhole, and then we were into a grey ill-lit blue-tiled hall.

  It was worse than I thought, worse than I had ever expected. There are few periods in furniture when some good things are not made; no periods in art, however enervated, when some good pictures are not painted. It is like claret in the off years. But of course one has to allow for the perverse ingenuity of the purchaser. All the stuff in this house had been bought, I would have thought, between 1912 and 1918, and for the most part it had clearly been bought for its ornateness and its cheapness. It was gimcrack: bamboo and deal and fumed oak and plywood. The one or two really solid pieces were monstrous in their size and ugliness. As for the paintings, they were all dark brooding landscapes of Highland cattle, painted by nonentities, or indifferent etchings of some semi-classical subject, spotted with mildew and badly framed. I quickly concluded that Sam Taylor’s aunt must have had many affinities with Sam Taylor.

  We trudged, somewhat stertorously, up all three flights of stairs and solemnly trudged down again.

  ‘These two pictures,’ I said, breathing my displeasure. ‘Watercolours of the Seine. Where would those be?’

  ‘Ah,’ he said, ‘they’re locked away! I was leaving those until the end! Here! In here! I’ll show you!’

  He went into the dining-room and unlocked a cupboard and drew out two pictures wrapped in brown paper. I unwrapped them and stared. They were exactly as described, watercolours of Paris bridges across the Seine, signed Walter Parr and dated. And just as clearly Walter Parr was some amateur, perhaps a cousin of the purchaser, who had set up his easel and made two facsimiles of the scene without a trace of talent or even the amateur originality of the primitives. The pictures were worth the value of the frames and nothing more.

  I looked up and shook my head at Sam’s thin red face, which was irritatingly close to mine. I stood up to get away from his alcoholic breath.

  ‘Worthless. There’s nothing in the house at all. You’ll be lucky to get the estimate that these people made. Nothing! Absolutely nothing.’

  He look
ed woebegone and slightly tearful, but perhaps it was only the whisky coming out.

  ‘There’s these prints,’ he said. ‘Aren’t they any good, laddie?’

  ‘Nothing’s any good. I am afraid your aunt was the wrong sort of buyer. We had better leave now. I must get back to my office.’ Although to tell the truth the five brandies I had willy-nilly taken scarcely disposed me for work.

  I pulled over the stack of prints he indicated in the corner and took out a small painting about the size of a piece of quarto paper, badly framed in green velvet and gilt, and was going to thrust it back when some quality in it took my attention and I carried it nearer the light.

  It was an oil painting – not, I thought, a very good one – and it showed a woman in panniers and a white bonnet taking a step in a dance in company with a wigged gentleman in knee-breeches and a sort of frock-coat. It was just the kind of artificial composition that some run-of-the mill Victorian or Edwardian artist would choose to make up when he lacked the inspiration or talent to do anything original. Find a couple of models and put them in fancy dress. Or perhaps not even bother with models: copy the dresses from some book on 18th century manners.

  But at least it was an oil painting different from all the Highland cows and the lowering sunsets; and in spite of the stiff postures of the two people, the brush strokes were firm and the colours well chosen.

  I said: ‘Do you mind if I take this out of its frame?’

  ‘Not a bit, old boy; do anything you like. Why, d’you think you’ve found something?’

  ‘No, nothing at all!’ I snapped, turning the picture over. The back paper was already torn, and it was not difficult to lift another six inches away. The painting was on board, and the board was clearly antique.

  ‘What is it, laddie?’ he asked.

  ‘It appears to be Italian or French,’ I said. ‘ It is probably a copy, but at least it is genuinely old. It might be a copy of a painting by Tiepolo or – or Fragonard. Something of that nature. This cheap frame makes it look worse than it is. And it needs cleaning, of course.’

 

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