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CONTENTS
CHAPTER I: AT DRUMMONDALE STATION
CHAPTER II: AT BEECHER’S
CHAPTER III: GUEST LECTURE
CHAPTER IV: PARTY: ONE
CHAPTER V: PARTY: TWO
CHAPTER VI: BODY
CHAPTER VII: INSPECTOR ROYLE
CHAPTER VIII: PROFESSOR WICKHAM
CHAPTER IX: KENILWORTH
CHAPTER X: THE METHODIST LADIES
CHAPTER XI: THE DRUMMONDALE SCHOOL
CHAPTER XII: THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT
CHAPTER XIII: WOMEN OF PROPERTY
CHAPTER XIV: DARK INTERLUDE
CHAPTER XV: AFTER MIDNIGHT
CHAPTER XVI: PRIVATE LIVES
CHAPTER XVII: PARTY-SPIRIT
CHAPTER XVIII: IN AT THE KILL
CHAPTER I
AT DRUMMONDALE STATION
IN THE LATE autumn sunshine the little station at Drummondale dozed on, regardless of its vital position in the nationwide network of connecting lines which the State Railways Board mentioned in its advertisements, and regardless too of the fact that the express train from Sydney was due in two minutes’ time. For the fact that a train was due rarely implied that it was about to arrive. And if it did turn up, by some quirk of organizational chance, the station could put itself into its usual state of preparedness by the ticket-collector lounging out on to the platform from the station-master’s office (where at this very moment he was admiring himself in front of a long, dirty mirror, his oily hands twisted round behind his back, poised to squeeze a festering yellow boil on his neck) and by the stray porter, who was forbidden by his doctor from carrying anything, pushing his cap back a fraction of an inch from its present position, where it was shielding most of his face from the early evening sun. But as yet there was no sign of either functionary stirring himself into what passed for action, so it was clear that a train was expected only in the most nominal sense.
Professor Wickham walked in his tense, abrupt way up and down the station, sometimes banging one fist nervously into the palm of the other hand, sometimes grinning automatically — in the way he did to students that he thought he might have seen before — at a couple of stray dogs running along the platform and across the line. His hair was very fair, and brushed forwards, and his eyes were an indeterminate blue. From a distance he looked like a dreamy Scandinavian; from close to he looked merely ineffectual. He was medium-height, but thick-set, and his hair flopped over his eyes periodically, making him look much younger than he really was. When he had been appointed to his chair at Drummondale he had been young to be a Professor, though not as young to be a Professor as most Australian Professors are. Now, twelve years later, and after several disappointed attempts to be called to Chairs elsewhere, he was beginning to lose his pleasant, puppyish air, and to settle despondently into his fifties, conscious that here he was, and here he was likely to stay. At the moment he looked, and was, distinctly worried, and when a glance at his watch coincided in his perambulations with the door of the station-master’s office, he put his head inside, and met the suspicious gaze of the youthful ticket-collector, who was wiping pus from his neck with a dirty rag.
Professor Wickham cleared his throat nervously:
‘Er . . . er . . . could you tell me when the train from Sydney is due?’ he asked, in that tentative tone of voice he used for members of the lower orders he thought might turn nasty. The young man looked at him aggressively, and sized him up as a University bloke. Not one of the local graziers, and not likely to complain.
‘Do you know this is private, this room?’
‘Er — private?’
‘Yes, private. You see that notice on the door? Private, it says. P-R-I- — can you see it?’
‘Oh, er, yes . . . yes.’
‘Well, then. Private, see. The general public not allowed in. Get it?’
‘Yes, oh yes, sorry,’ said Professor Wickham, withdrawing his head.
Having won his little victory, the ticket-collector decided to be obliging, in the best traditions of his service. He lounged over to the door, and draped himself by the doorpost.
‘Now, what was it?’
‘Er — is the train from Sydney due?’ said Wickham.
‘Oh, it’s due,’ said the young man.
‘And when will it arrive then?’
‘I don’t know, do I? Your guess is as good as mine, I’d say — probably better, in fact, ’cos I’m not guessing.’
He turned his eyes towards the horizon, in the direction of Brisbane, to signify his professional indifference to whatever might be coming his way from Sydney. Professor Wickham resumed his lonely stroll, thinking wistfully of the polite employees of the British Railway system in his Oxford days, whom his memory had covered with a sentimental haze. He had not been married when he first went to England, and almost everything that had happened to him before his marriage was covered in his mind with a sentimental haze. There had been precious little room for sentiment since.
It really was very difficult. Lucy had impressed on him not to be late, because they had to be over at the Turbervilles’ by half past eight, and it was a forty-mile drive. In the ordinary course of events Lucy was far from unappreciative of a visiting Professor as a means of relieving the rural monotony of the University of Drummondale — and she particularly appreciated a specimen from one of the older Universities. But it was especially unfortunate that the present one, with all the glories of Oxbridge on his head, had happened to coincide with the twenty-first party of the eldest Turberville, a party she had gone to enormous lengths to get an invitation to. The Professor would have to be shunted off to his motel for the night in plenty of time for Wickham to get back home, dress, and drive himself and Lucy out to the barbecue-dance. That was how Lucy had planned it. And if the State Railways didn’t fit in with her plans, all hell would break loose over the head of her husband — which was not logical, even if it was standard marital practice.
Professor Wickham wondered a little to himself about the arrangements. Something always seemed to go wrong when Visiting Professors arrived. There was that vulgar little Welshman whom they’d taken out to the McKays the night he arrived to see what real graziers’ hospitality was like. The only glimpse the students had caught of him was his rigid form being dumped on to the train, en route from one cancelled lecture in Drummondale to another cancelled lecture in Brisbane. Then there was the swinging American Professor whom Lucy had refused to have in the house, and whom he’d had put up in the guest-room of one of the two women’s colleges. He blamed himself a good deal for that. Of course there was no guarantee it had been his child. Daisy Bates College prided itself on the nunnery-like strictness of its rules, but Australia was an open-air country, and what couldn’t be done in the comfort of a bed could very easily take place in the snake-infested undergrowths around the campus. Still, the girl had said it was the American, and it didn’t do the Department any good.
He ran over things as presently arranged. He might be able to pass off tonight, since it could be presented as the tactful thing to leave Professor Belville-Smith to have a good night’s rest after his tiring journey. He was as old as the hills, of course — otherwise he wouldn’t be out here at all. It was really incredible how old all the visiting lecturers sent by institutions like the British Council were. Perhaps the more vigorous younger scholars insisted on Europe or America, and the ones who wer
e too old to have any ‘pull’ were given Australia. It hardly improved the British image. But if the old chap was just dying to collapse into his bed that was all to the good. Professor Wickham did wonder about arrangements for the next few days, though. He had sensed an undercurrent of resentment among his own staff over the tea-and-scones arrangement for tomorrow afternoon. Yet Lucy had been very insistent that this was all she was going to give the ‘academics’. Could it have got to their ears that there was going to be a party the very same evening for Belville-Smith to which only the local notables were to be invited? Wickham sighed. Of course it must have reached them. Nothing was secret in a town the size of Drummondale. That must explain their coldness to him. That dreadful girl Alice O’Brien had practically cut him in the corridor that morning! Cut by a temporary lecturer! Well, her time would be up soon. Perhaps he could get some nice young Englishman to take her place. Lucy always liked the ones fresh from Oxbridge, and they were always polite to her for the first year or so. It made things so much easier. And he did think they gave the department tone. Most of the other departments were desperately lacking in tone.
He sighed, and looked into the darkness. There was no sign of the train. Lucy would be livid with him. Why had she never got livid with him before they were married? It would have made things so much easier. He would certainly still have married her, but there would be less of this feeling of having been had.
• • •
As the pace of the Sydney-Brisbane express train slowed down to a near halt going up the Northern ranges, the cold of an Australian autumn on the Northern Tableland struck chill into the aged bones of Professor Belville-Smith. He sat huddled in the corner of a dull and dirty first-class compartment, which had not been thoroughly cleaned since the last Royal Tour, and which he was sharing with various less than first-class companions. At the beginning of the day, which seemed an age away, his mind had just been lively enough to take notice of these companions, to tut-tut mentally at their vowel-sounds and their shirts, and even to throw glances of conspiratorial horror at the British Council representative who had seen him off in Sydney; but the long day’s journey into night across the grey-green monotony of the Australian countryside had dampened his far-from-sparkling spirits, so that now, when very little was to be seen outside, he was close to extinction.
As he looked out into the murk at the grazing sheep, and they looked at him with an equally lively interest, the rhythm of the wheels made words in his brain, and the words made fragments of the lectures, the lectures he had been giving to large and small groups of bored students and teachers in the lecture-rooms of Universities, in capital city after hideous capital city. ‘The CHARM of her PROSE and the GRACE of her MANNer.’ The words were familiar to him not only from their recent over-repetition: they also seemed, now, a part of his boyhood. He had been delivering that lecture since 1922. The same lecture, in the same words. Less frequently of late, perhaps. For by the time he got to Mrs Gaskell the students had sometimes faded away to nothingness, and he had packed his lecture away again and slowly made his way back to his college, for he was not one of those who believed that a lecture should be given, regardless of whether or not there were students there to hear it. That was carrying things a little too far. Last term he had not even gone along to see if there was any audience for some of his later lectures — ‘Charles Reade, an unjustly neglected novelist’ and ‘Mrs Oliphant — a lesser Trollope’. Perhaps it was better that the latter lecture never got delivered these days. How strange that the revival in Mrs Oliphant’s reputation which he had been predicting all these years had never actually come about! Why, he wondered? It must be something to do with the modern world. But he turned his old mind from that thought with horror. The modern world was something he had never seen, and didn’t want to see. He had a vague idea that, if he didn’t take any notice of it, it might pass away before very long, and his own world come back.
The rhythm of the wheels changed: ‘PUNgent she CAN be; CRUel she NEVer is.’ His eyes watered a little. Dear Jane Austen! Looking around the other occupants of the compartment he comforted himself with the thought that they never, never in a million years, would appreciate Jane Austen. She was his Jane! A combination of Mrs Gaskell and Virginia Woolf, with very little of the real Jane. He had got a good deal of quiet enjoyment out of giving that lecture to those vulgar-shirted yokels in those disgustingly dirty cities he had just come from. He felt an emissary from a forgotten world, bringing a fragrant lost culture to the raw, raucous civilization which now and then had forced itself on his notice in the last few weeks, but had mostly drifted past his old eyes, unattended. Perhaps he had planted some seeds . . .?
A welcome feeling in his stomach told him that he was hungry, and then his brain, slowly reacting, told him that he was in Australia. An acute pang of disappointment made him pout out his lower lip like a baby. His hunger was unlikely to be satisfactorily appeased. To cover his gastronomical experiences of the last few months he had come up with a formula of ‘quantity rather than quality’ — not an original observation, but one he was rather proud of. Because it didn’t apply only to food, though he applied it mainly to food, because food was what he thought of for much of the time. He peered out at the endless, dusty landscape. Quantity rather than quality.
Suddenly there were two or three houses together, and then more, in a sort of improvised road. They were coming to a little town. He looked closer. Surely this could not be a University town. No. Obviously just another of those little country places they had been passing all day.
The train pulled into a station, and the placard along the platform, hardly legible for the accumulated dust of this throat-clotting country, read DRUMMONDALE. The name rang a vague bell in the back of his mind. Oh dear. He must have arrived.
• • •
It struck Professor Belville-Smith, or rather it edged its way into his consciousness, that the little man who had met him was distinctly in a hurry. The handshake had been twice up and down, and he had been hurried through the ticket-barrier as fast as the ticket-collector, whose hand seemed deftly able to grasp any ticket but his, would allow. Now he was being hustled into a dusty Ford Cortina as if he were a troublesome old nanny on a family outing, and he was not at all sure that he liked it. Of course the car refused to obey the driver in a hurry. This was no doubt partly due to the fact that he did not put the clutch in before trying to start it. They drove off jerkily into the monotonous streets, with the shabby wooden houses and the tired grass and hedges, like every suburb he had seen in this old young country, only tireder and shabbier. Professor Belville-Smith tried to formulate a description of it all. ‘Like a recent settlement in Purgatory,’ he said to himself. He smiled: that was really rather good. Should he suggest it to the funny little man beside him? Perhaps not. He had noticed in Australians a certain touchiness about their own country. Certain remarks he had made, intended to be only obliquely insulting, had met with disconcertingly violent retorts. It didn’t do to tempt Providence when you were hungry.
‘You must be very tired,’ said Professor Wickham.
‘Just a little, just a little,’ said the Distinguished Guest, feeling much refreshed by his phrase-making.
‘We must have a chat about your work on the Augustans, when you’re feeling less tired,’ said Professor Wickham.
The Distinguished Guest racked his brains to remember what work he might once have done on the Augustans. Of course — the pamphlet on the lyrical poetry of John Gay, the product of an unusual outburst of energy in early middle-age. How strange that anyone should still be reading that.
‘Delighted,’ he murmured urbanely.
‘Not now, of course,’ said his host. ‘It is such a tiring journey.’
‘But most interesting,’ lied Belville-Smith, gallantly, with an unpleasant feeling that he was in the way, and would shortly be disposed of.
‘I always fly myself,’ said Wickham, changing gear with a horror-film shriek. ‘Less tiring.’
Through the deepening darkness they hastened erratically. A short stretch of neon-lighting suggested that they might be in the main street, and a few drunks rolled across the headlights of Professor Wickham’s car. But they turned off, and almost immediately approached the illuminated signs of the Yarumba Motel which lit up rows of garishly painted little chalets. Professor Wickham stopped abruptly outside the reception hut, and jumped out. Belville-Smith looked around him with growing distaste. It was exactly the same as every other motel he had stayed at in this straggling, beastly country — just a bit smaller, perhaps, but basically exactly the same. He might be in Perth, or Adelaide, or Melbourne, or Sydney, or Newcastle. Or a recent settlement in Purgatory, he said to himself, with a self-satisfied smile.
‘You’ll be very comfortable here,’ said Professor Wickham, emerging brusquely from reception. ‘Motels are the only places to stay, here in Australia, you know.’
‘So it seems,’ said Professor Belville-Smith.
He felt himself speedily decanted from the car and hustled into his predictable room.
‘There’s everything here,’ said Professor Wickham, glancing around quickly. The room was furnished by the same computer which had furnished the motels in Perth, Adelaide, Melbourne, Sydney and Newcastle. ‘Shower, bath, sofa, table, desk, you see.’ He was very clearly making for the door.
‘Food,’ said Professor Belville-Smith.
‘I beg your pardon,’ said Wickham, caught in midescape.
‘Food. I have not yet eaten my evening meal.’
‘Oh! Well, you just ring. Ring the reception, and give your order. They’ll serve it in here.’
Professor Belville-Smith advanced purposefully on the telephone. Wickham made good his escape while he could.
‘I’ll pick you up at nine tomorrow.’
• • •
‘Do they serve evening meals at the Yarumba?’ said Wickham to Lucy, as they drove out to the barbecue-dance.
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