by Jane Gardam
“Well, I’m—we’re just setting off for London. Filth’s putting on his black shoes upstairs. He’ll be down in a minute, I’m dressed for London.”
“Are you wearing the pearls?”
“Yes.”
“Touch them. Are they warm? Are they mine? Or his? Would he know?”
“Yours. No, he wouldn’t notice. Are you drunk? It must be after dinner.”
“No. Well, yes. Maybe. Did you get my note?”
“Yes.”
“I didn’t tell you in it that Harry was given a medal. Twice mentioned in despatches last year. ‘Exceptional bravery.’ Northern Ireland.”
“No!”
“Hush-hush stuff. Secret service. Underground sort of stuff.”
“Should you be telling me this?”
“No. He never told us at the time. Very, very brave. I want to make it absolutely clear.”
“I believe it. I hated your letter. I saw him about a month ago and he was miserable. He said you thought he was rubbish. He didn’t ask me for money. Terry? Terry, where’ve you gone?”
A silence.
“Nowhere. Nowhere to go. Betty, Harry’s dead. My boy.”
Filth came down the stairs, looking for his bowler hat.
In the London train Filth thought: She’s looking old. An old woman. The first time. Poor old Betty, old.
“You all right, Betty?”
“Yes.”
Her eyes seemed huge. Strange and swimmy. He thought, She must watch that blood-pressure.
He saw how she looked affectionately at the young Tamil ticket inspector who was intent on moving them to a cleaner carriage in the first class. She was thanking the boy very sweetly. “Perfectly all right here,” said Filth, but Betty was off down the aisle and into the next carriage. Silly woman. Could be her grandson. Still attractive. You could see the bloke liked her.
At Waterloo they parted, Filth to lunch in his Inn at the Temple, Betty he wasn’t sure where. The University Women’s Club right across towards Hyde Park? Whoever with? And why was she making off towards Waterloo Bridge? The solicitor’s office was in Holborn. He watched her almost running down the flight of steps, under the arches and over the maze of roads towards the National Theatre. Still has good legs, bless her. He stepped into a taxi.
Betty, at the National Theatre, made a pretence of eating lunch, pushing a tray along in a queue of people excited to have tickets for Electra in an hour’s time. She headed for the foyer (Harry is dead) and got the lift up to the open-air terrace where there were fire-eaters and mummers and people being statues and loud canned music played. (My boy Harry.) Beside her on the seat two young lovers sat mute, chewing on long bread rolls with flaps of ham and salad hanging out. When they had finished eating they wiped their hands on squares of paper and threw the paper down. Then in one simple movement they turned to face each other and merged into each other’s arms.
She decided to go at once to Bantry Street. If she walked all the way she would arrive just about on time. On Waterloo Bridge, once she had climbed the steep concrete stairs the crowds came down on her like the Battle itself. She kept near the bridge’s side, sometimes going almost hand over hand. People in London move so fast! (Harry is dead.) Some of them looked her over quickly as they passed, noticed her pearls, her matching coat and skirt. The silk blouse. The gloves. I’m antique. They think I’m out of Agatha Christie. (Is dead!) My hair is tidy and well cut, like the woman . . . the woman in . . . the woman like my mother in the hairdresser in Hong Kong. The day the crowds of shadows were to pass me in the night towards the house in the trees. He is dead.
At the Aldwych she felt dizzy and found a pill in her handbag and swallowed it, looking round to see if by any chance Filth was anywhere about. He’d be in a fury if he couldn’t find a taxi. He’d never get a bus. He wouldn’t much care to walk. No sign.
Oh, but why worry? He always could find taxis. He was so tall. Taller still when he brandished the rolled umbrella. He’d forgotten the bowler hat, thank goodness. It was still under the tulips. The last bowler hat in London and my boy is dead.
Here was Bantry Street and there, thank God, was Filth getting out of a taxi and smiling. The driver had got out and was holding open the door for him. Filth looked somebody. His delightful smile!
But it was the last smile of the day. On the next train back to Tisbury they sat opposite one another across a table in a determinedly second-class carriage. Betty was pale and Filth sat purple in choleric silence.
The solicitor had not been there! She had children ill at home and either had not remembered or the firm had forgotten to cancel the appointment. And at the reception desk—and the place looked like an hotel now, with palms in pots—they had not even seemed apologetic.
“Salisbury,” he said, after an hour. “We’ll take the damn things into Salisbury to sign. Perfectly good solicitors there and half the price.”
“I always said so.” Betty closed her eyes. (Harry.)
“It is a positive outrage. I shall write to the Law Society.”
(My boy, Harry.)
“We are, after all, no longer young.”
“No.”
“Nor are we exactly nobodies. They’ve been our solicitors for forty years, that firm.”
“Yes.”
She opened her eyes and watched Wiltshire going by. On the way out she had thought that she’d seen a hoopoe in a hedge. Filth would have been enchanted but she had not told him. Very brave. Despatches. Northern Ireland. Harry. No, no. He is not dead. My Harry.
And, seeing the first of the chalk in the rippling hills she knew that she would leave Filth. She had to go to Veneering.
Filth now closed his eyes and, opposite him, she examined his face. He looked like a fine portrait of himself, each line of his face magnificently drawn. Oh, such conceit! Such self-centredness! Such silliness and triviality! I’ll tell him when we get home. And a wonderful lightness of heart flooded over her, a squirm of ancient sexual pleasure.
It will probably kill him, she thought. But I shall go. I may tell him at once. Now.
The train had begun to slow down for Tisbury Station. It usually stopped just outside for several minutes, for the platform was short and they had to wait to let the fast London-to-Plymouth train through. Betty looked out of the window and on the tapering end of the platform, way beyond the signal and just as they were sliding to a halt, she saw Albert Ross. He was looking directly at her.
Filth was standing up, ready to get out. He came round to her and shook her shoulder. “Betty. Come along. We’re here. Whatever’s wrong now?”
“Nothing,” she said.
In the car that they had parked outside the station that morning but a thousand years ago, she said, “I saw Albert Ross. Standing on the platform. Waiting for the train from Plymouth to go through.”
Filth was negotiating Berrywood Lane—a tractor and two four-by-fours, two proud girls on horseback—and said, “You fell asleep.”
“No. He looked straight at me.”
There, on the hall table, lay the tulip bulbs.
I’ll wait till I’ve planted them, she decided. I can’t leave them to shrivel and rot, and she took off her shoes and climbed the stairs to bed. I’ll tell him tomorrow after lunch.
She was up early, not long after dawn, and ready in her gardening clothes. She would change later, after she had packed. It was a damp, warm day, perfect for planting and she arranged the bulbs in groups of twenty-five for lozenge-shaped designs each in a different colour along the foot of the red wall. The planting round the apple trees was finished already. With her favourite long dibble, she began to make a hole for each bulb. She liked to plant at least six inches down. Then you could put wallflowers on top of them to flower first, but this year she had left it a bit late for that. She humped herself about on the planting mat, put a little sharp sand in the bottom of each hole, laid a bulb ready beside each. How stiff and cumbersome her body was now. How ugly her old hands, in the enormous gree
n gloves. A hectic sunlight washed across the garden and she went into the house for a mug of coffee. Edward was in the kitchen, silent in his own world.
“Bulbs finished yet?”
“Not quite.”
She went back to the garden and he followed her, carrying his stick and binoculars on to the terrace. She stood with her coffee, and all at once the rooks started a wild tumult in the ash trees: some dreadful disagreement, some palace revolution, some premonition of change. They began to swoop about above the branches and their ramshackle great nests, all over the sky, like smuts flying from a burning chimney. She was down the garden on her knees again now and saw that Veneering’s pearls were lying in the flower bed beside her. For the first time in her life she had forgotten to take off a necklace when she went to bed. Nor had she noticed them when she washed and dressed this morning. They must have slipped from her neck. She was eye to eye with them now, on her haunches, head down. She picked them off the soil and let them pour into one of the holes for the tulips.
My guilty pearls, she thought. I hope the sharp sand won’t hurt them.
She had rather seized up now. She was in a difficult position on hands and knees. If I can get on my elbows . . . she thought. Goodness—! Here we go. Well, I never was exactly John Travolta. That’s better. Now the bottom half.
She rested, and from her lowly place noticed out on the lawn how the bindweed was piercing the turf, rising in green spirals, pirouetting quite high, seeking something on which to cling. The wild, returning to the garden.
She could see Filth, too, sitting on the terrace with his coffee, staring up at the rooks through his binoculars. Then he put down the binoculars and picked up his Airedale-headed walking stick and, quite oblivious of her, like a child, pointed it up at the rookery and shouted, “Bang, bang, bang.” Then he swung the stick about for a left and a right. “Bang, bang, bang.”
He’s quite potty, she thought. It’s too late. I can’t leave him now.
But then she did.
Filth, letting his binoculars swoop away from the rookery and down across the garden a minute later, saw her lying in the flower bed, particulary still.
PART FIVE
Peace
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
Three years later—the years Edward Feathers saw as his torture and suffering and the village called his fortitude—came the extraordinary news that the house next door to Dexters, the monstrous hidden house above him, had been sold.
One winter’s day, a single van arrived and was quickly away again. Who had bought the upper house nobody knew. After a time Edward Feathers, on his morning constitutional to the lane end to collect his Daily Telegraph from the length of drainpipe attached to the rough handrail at the foot of the slope, saw that a second bit of drainpipe had been fastened to the handrail of his new neighbour across the lane. The paper was not the Daily Telegraph. It was thicker and stubbier and from what he could see it was the Guardian.
How insolent! To copy his invention for a rainproof newspaper without his permission! He marched off on his emu legs, chin forward, plunging his walking stick into the road. He met his neighbour Dulcie, bright and smiling as usual. When he had slashed his way by she said to her dog, “So—what’s the matter with him today?”
She did not know what was to come.
About a month after the newcomer’s arrival a new telephone was installed (the Donheads move slowly) and the newcomer used it to telephone the village shop in a more distant Donhead. He thanked them for the delivery of his daily paper and would the shop kindly put up a postcard in their window advertising for daily help? What was the going rate? Excellent. Double it. And stipulate laundry. The newcomer had lived in the Far East and was ashamed to say that he was totally incapable of looking after himself.
“Oh, dear me,” they said. “And no wife, sir?”
“My wife is dead. She was Chinese. I’m afraid she had no idea how to do laundry either. We had servants.”
“We’ll do our best,” said the shop. “You sound just like your neighbour. He was from Singapore-way. He’s a lawyer.”
“Oh.”
“What name shall I put on the card, sir? Perhaps you are a lawyer, too?”
“Yes, I am, as it happens.”
“Well, fancy that. You may be friends.”
“My name is Veneering.”
“Your neighbour is Sir Edward Feathers.”
There was a terrible silence. The telephone was put down. “Funny one we’ve got now,” said the shop to Eddie Feathers’s daily who was in buying marmalade for him. “Not a bundle of fun.”
“Makes two of them,” said Kate, and half an hour later, letting herself into the Feathers domain, “What about this, then? Next door it’s another lawyer and he’s from Singapore-way, too. His name’s Veneering. That’s a queer name if ever. Is it Jewish? He’s wanting a domestic, and don’t you worry, I’ve said I’m not available. There’s enough to do here. I’ll find him someone but—Sir Edward, what’s wrong? You’ve turned greenish. Sit down and I’ll get you your cup of tea.”
Feathers sat silent, stunned out of thought. At last he said, “Thank God that Betty is dead.”
Over the way Veneering sat on by the telephone for a long while and said at last, “I must move. Thank God that Betty is dead.”
After a time looking at his fire, burning brightly in the great chimney, Feathers also said, “I must move.”
A bombshell coincidence?
Yet it was really not so very unlikely that Veneering had lighted on this particular house. The Donheads are thick with retired international lawyers, and house agents’ blurbs do not always mention English county boundaries. Dorset is large and, anyway, Veneering had no idea of the Featherses’ address. He was not the detective his son had been. No, the only really curious thing was that after their mutual discovery they never met. Filth, far too proud to change the route of his afternoon walk, kept to the same paths as before, went to church as before, drove to the same small supermarket as before, kept the same friends. It was Veneering who kept himself out of sight. He was, quite simply, never about. Cases of wine were delivered at quite frequent intervals and the village shop would drop off meagre groceries on his porch up the hill. His cleaner came when she felt like it and reported that he was obviously someone “in reduced circumstances” and his garden was left to go wild. Sometimes a hired car would come out from the station to take him to the London train and drop him at home again after dark. Later, it was reported that the circumstances could not have been that much reduced for the hired car began to transport him all the way. When people called at the house with envelopes for Save the Children or Breast Cancer, they were ignored. The postman said he delivered very little up there. There was seldom a light.
Once, when a much younger Hong Kong lawyer called on Filth and Filth walked him back to his car at the end of the lane, the lawyer said, “Didn’t Terry Veneering retire down this way?” before remembering the myth of the clash of the Titans. But surely over now?
“Lives next door,” said Filth.
“Next door! Then you are friends.”
“Friends?” said Filth. “Never seen him. Certainly don’t want to. That’s his personal bit of drainpipe he’s put up. He copied mine. He never had an original idea.”
“Good God! I’ve a mind to go and see him myself. He went through it, you know. This is ridiculous.”
“Go if you like,” said Filth, “but you needn’t bother to come and see me again if you do.”
Filth walked that day further than usual and returned home after dark. It was getting towards Christmas, and Kate and the gardener had hung fairy lights around his length of lead piping. There was a holly wreath on his door and a spangle of coloured lights shone from his windows. He could see the light of his coal fire in the sitting room, a table light on in the hall showing Christmas cards standing about. As ever, the right-hand bend of the lane and the house above were in total darkness.
Don’t expect he’s t
here, thought Filth. Playboy! Probably lives half the time in his London club. Or with a whore. Or with several whores. Or in Las Vegas or somewhere vulgar for Christmas. Disneyland.
After the hellish years without Betty, Filth was, however, beginning to learn how to live again. The remorse. The loss of the sense of comfort she brought, her integration with the seasons of the year, her surety about a life of the spirit—never actually discussed. Often, when he was alone in the house and she seemed to be just at his shoulder, he would say aloud to her shadow, “I left you too often. My work was too important to me.” He did not address the first days of their engagement though. Never. Never.
Christmases alone he liked. Positively liked. With Betty unavailable there was nobody he wanted to be with. He and Betty had gone in the last years to the hotel in Salisbury together for Christmas lunch. No fuss. No paper hats. No streamers to get caught up in all her necklaces. Now he went alone to the same hotel, the same table. Taken there and returned by taxi. Then a good read, a whisky or two before bed. This year, his fourth without her, was to be exactly as usual.
Except that it was snowing. And it had been snowing very hard since he got up. The snowflakes fell so fast and thick he could not say whether they were going up or down. He could not even see the barrier of trees that shielded him from his neighbour.
And this year—no sign of the taxi. It was already half an hour late. Filth decided to ring it up but found that his phone was dead. Ha!
He padded about—getting very late indeed now—and was relieved to hear a loud bang and slither outside in the drive. But nothing further.
Taxi’s crashed against the wall in the snow, he thought, and went out of the front door one step only and still in his slippers and without his coat. But there was no taxi, only a great heap of snow that had slid from his roof into the drive. And the snow was falling faster than ever.