Read All Change: Cazalet Chronicles Online
Authors: Elizabeth Jane Howard
Tags: #Sagas, #General, #Fiction
‘What would be real?’ Hugh had lit a cigarette, and the question was asked in a friendly non-combative manner.
‘Well, what we’d like now—’
‘Need now,’ his brother interrupted, ‘would be something like bacon and eggs.’
‘Or a smelly cheese sandwich, which would be less trouble.’ Tom had spotted the Brie on the table.
‘We could make it ourselves, Mum.’
Hugh looked at Jemima, who shrugged. ‘OK. You win. Only bring me the bread and the bread board. You always make a mess of the loaf.’
While the sandwiches were being made, Henry said, ‘You know, we actually need these because we’re growing so much. You need more food when you’re doing that.’
This was true. They already topped her by a head.
‘If we feed you like this, about six meals a day,’ Hugh said, ‘you’ll end up being nine feet tall.’
This delighted them. ‘We could be in a circus as the tallest people in England.’
‘The world, probably.’
Practically all conversations were carried out with both of them at once.
‘Now take your food upstairs to your room, and don’t wake Laura.’
‘Wake Laura? You must be mad, Mum. We don’t want to start hearing about her soppy bear. Of course we won’t wake her.’
‘It’s good she goes to bed earlier than we do: it gives us a bit of grown-up time without her spoiling it.’
Perfunctory hugs and they were gone.
‘Peace,’ she said. Hugh stretched out his good hand across the table. ‘You have such exceptionally nice children, I just thought you might want more of them.’
‘Do you?’
‘I want what you want.’
‘Oh, but past that!’ He had such kind eyes that it was difficult to find the true person behind them. ‘I mean, are you secretly wishing for them, or longing for me to feel the same? You remember we had a pact not to conceal things from each other? Well, I feel that you’re beginning to do that. I want to know what you think, not what you think I want you to think.’
There was what seemed to Jemima a very long silence. He had withdrawn his hand, rubbing it now across his head, and seeing this, she said, ‘Darling Hugh, let’s talk about it tomorrow.’
‘No. I wasn’t concealing anything from you. The truth is that I don’t know. Of course if we had another I would love it. But I’m not sure I could bear you going through all that again. When you had Laura, my chief fear was that I might lose you.’
There was another silence during which they both remembered the prolonged and agonizing labour into which she had gone so lightly. ‘I had the twins quite easily, darling, and we know there’s only one this time,’ she had said. She knew that Sybil had lost Simon’s twin and that it had left an enduring mark. But hours had passed, and he had had to watch her strength and courage ebbing away . . .
Twenty-four hours later, Laura had joined them, bloodied, crying – and perfect. But it had been an ordeal for both of them. Custom had changed. He had not witnessed Sybil’s labour, but with Jemima he had been present throughout. During those hours he had been beset by the nightmare of her not surviving, of possibly being left with a new-born baby, and her own children orphaned. When they were alone, while the baby was being bathed, he had held her hand with a small rocking movement. Though he was smiling, tears had streamed from his eyes – the relief had overwhelmed him.
‘I think,’ he said now, with difficulty, ‘that I’m content to stay as we are. But only if you feel the same. Laura has enough cousins. She doesn’t need a sibling. There.’
‘There,’ she repeated. She got up from the table and began to clear it of food. ‘Better get on with this before they come down wanting another giant snack. You’re so sweet to them, Hugh. They’re nearly as lucky to have you as I am. No, you go on up, this won’t take me a minute.’
‘What does “there” mean?’
‘It means I agree with you.’
‘I thought it did. Just wanted to make sure.’
SIMON, POLLY AND GERALD
He’d got through absolutely awful homesickness at his prep school, but when he’d had to go on to Radley, his public school, it had started all over again. One got used to muffled sobbing in the dorms at night but, except for the inevitable bullying, nobody said anything. It wouldn’t have been good form – a mysterious state that seemed to involve a whole lot of things one didn’t do or say. At home (Home Place) he had early learned that his mother dying had upset his father, and Polly and Wills – but how could
Wills
be upset – he couldn’t remember her at all. Funnily enough, though, he’d told Simon he did remember feeling hopelessly sad – and you couldn’t talk to anyone about that because they would simply think you were odd. The one great thing Simon had learned from his schools was never to stand out. Be as much like everyone else as you possibly could. Now he wondered whether that applied to the rest of life, too. Because trying to be like everyone else was not only tiring but dull. He had noticed recently that he was bored nearly all the time. Dad and Jemima were quite kind – well, very kind, really – considering he was an outsider: the twins had their own life and Laura was just a small girl. The house in Ladbroke Grove had never been much like home, not like Home Place.
The only house Simon liked to be in was Fakenham Hall because it had Polly in it. He loved her more than anyone else, and because of her, he had even felt quite good about Gerald, who had never asked him those awful stock questions like was he at university, and what did he want to be after that.
He had spent a month with them: Neville didn’t need him and they were not going away anywhere because Polly had started another baby. They had decided to spruce up part of their huge, rambling garden, which meant rooting up a whole lot of half-dead shrubs and burning them. They hadn’t asked him to help, but he did, and found that he enjoyed it. When the weather was bad, he played the old Broadwood piano that lived in one of the unused rooms. It had a satinwood case and was badly out of tune, but he could play it without anyone being there. Polly got a piano tuner to come and tune it for him, and he had secretly started to compose a piano sonata, which he was going to dedicate to her when he had finished it. But mostly it was a hot, sunny August and he had found that he no longer wanted to stay in bed in the mornings because he wouldn’t know what on earth to do if he got up. Gerald had a book on gardening and together they started to take cuttings from the worn-out parterre of box, and then – more wildly – of various other shrubs. In between they had picnic lunches made by Polly and their old Nan – lovely food, cold sausage sandwiches and apple turnovers and figs and grapes from the crumbling greenhouses, with cider, and lemonade made by Polly. The children joined them for this, and once, afterwards, Eliza and Jane had insisted that they should all go and watch them practising for the gymkhana, their first.
And Andrew had cried because he hadn’t got his own pony. ‘But it would be no good, Andrew,’ Jane said, and Eliza chimed in, ‘There simply isn’t a pony small enough for you to ride.’
And Gerald had immediately said, ‘I’m a very small pony, you can ride me.’ He had cantered about the field with Andrew on his back – done the bending poles and even attempted one of the small jumps. By then he was the colour of a tomato and completely out of breath, and Andrew was laughing in triumph, and begged to do it again, but Polly had said that was enough, and that Gerald was closed until well after tea.
‘Closed? Like a shop, do you mean?’
‘Just like one.’
‘I don’t think people close like shops, Mummy.’
She was sitting with her back against the shady oak, and Gerald had cast himself on the ground beside her. On inspiration, Simon had got his pen and written ‘CLOSED’ on a paper napkin and laid it on Gerald’s chest.
‘We can’t read that word,’ Jane said. ‘We only read short words.’
‘It says “Closed”, and you could read it if you tried.’
‘I can read it,’ Andrew said. ‘It says “Closed”. I can read any word if I want to.’
In the end Simon offered to take the girls to unsaddle their fat, sweating ponies and turn them out into their paddock, and Andrew insisted on going with him. This earned him grateful smiles from the parents. ‘I think we’ll all knock off until five,’ Gerald had said. ‘It’ll be cooler then.’
He had no sooner helped the little girls divest Buttercup and Bluebell of their saddles and opened the gate to the paddock, when Nan appeared, saying it was high time for the children’s nap. There was a token clamour about this, the twins saying that Andrew should go first – ‘He ought to have a longer rest than us.’
‘You get those bridles off quick and come into the house. I’m not standing for any more of that palaver again. You’ll do as you’re told.’ She watched while the tack was slipped off and the ponies trotted out of reach into the paddock. Then they all followed her meekly to the kitchen door – Andrew, whom he had prised off the paddock gate, firmly held by her hand. ‘You can tell her ladyship that I’ve got them, and she should go and put her feet up.’
He said he would, but when he got back to them they were lying, hand in hand, asleep. He wanted to clear up the picnic, to start another bonfire, to root out another barrowload of weeds – he wanted, in fact, to astound them with his usefulness, to become someone they couldn’t do without, so that he could stay there for ever . . .
Simon realised, then, that he wasn’t – hadn’t been – bored for weeks. He loved the gardening work but, above all, he loved being treated as an equal by Poll and Gerald. They had discussed their plans for turning the ugly old house into a place for weddings and other events with him, asking him what he thought, and thanking him if he had the smallest idea for their project. They treated him as a grown-up member of their family. Which, in a way, he was. And if they were really going to let parts of the house out for parties, there would surely be a lot of jobs that he could do. He decided to have a serious talk with Poll about it, and meanwhile he would try to get on with his piece of music. He thought then, suddenly, of the Duchy. She would have been interested in his music, although – naturally – she would have noticed that he was nowhere near as good as the Three Bs, as she called them. This had made him wonder whether you could only get really good at something if you did it to the exclusion of anything else. That knocked out his becoming a composer because he certainly didn’t want to spend his whole life glued to a piano and struggling with his awful hand on manuscript paper. Yes, he certainly must have a good talk with Poll, and see what she thought. Without Gerald there, though, he added to himself: he could only talk about something so serious as his whole future with one person at a time.
EDWARD AND DIANA
She had certainly pulled all the stops out. Once they were back from France, she had got in touch with a whole clutch of agents, and stuff about houses had poured through the letterbox every morning. He had only stipulated that the place must be within reasonable distance from London as he was going to have to commute.
Hugh had suggested that he go to Southampton to run the wharf there, but he suspected that this was simply Hugh trying to get him out of the way to avoid the ceaseless arguments about capital, income and, of course, the bank. The worsening relationship with his brother, to whom he had always been so close, cut him to the heart. He knew that Diana came into this: Hugh maintained (in Edward’s view) a totally unreasoning prejudice. He had made no effort with her at all, refused – with transparent excuses – to dine with them, and never invited them to Ladbroke Grove. Bang went their quiet evenings of chess or bridge. They met occasionally for lunch at one of their clubs, but chiefly in the office, where constant interruptions seemed to mean that they went over the old ground again and again, without ever venturing beyond it. Supposing the bank ceased to wear their steadily increasing overdraft (him); what a dangerous difference it would make to their books if Southampton was to go (Hugh), and if they were to hang on to Southampton, who should be put in to run it? He was of the opinion that McIver was the best candidate: he’d been with them for thirty years now – hadn’t been called up due to poor eyesight – and worked his way up from office boy in Great Uncle Walter’s time to managing one of the London sawmills. But Hugh had insisted that the place must be run by a Cazalet. Which would mean Rupert, who, bless his heart, was not cut out for running anything, or Teddy, who, though promising, was not really experienced enough.
‘We’re nearly there, darling. Slow down a bit, it’s a very small turning.’
With a jolt, with relief, he was back in the present – always his best place. They were going to look at a house just outside Hawkhurst, and Diana had the agent’s instructions on her lap.
‘Now! This is it. There it is!’
It stood on a small eminence above them, a rectangular stone house with a slate roof, and a portico with two stone pillars each side of the front door. It was in what might once have been its small park, but was now let to farmers for grazing. He stopped the car for a moment so that they could look at it from afar. A plain house that had a kind of mini-grandeur about it that he knew she would love.
‘It looks marvellous. I can’t wait to see inside.’
She had been very excited ever since she had been sent the particulars, and this had made her more affectionate to him than she had been since before they’d gone to France. He squeezed her knee. ‘Off we go, then.’
It was a balmy September morning – the trees turning but still well leafed. They pulled into a narrow drive that had an open gate marked ‘Park House’. Mr Armitage, the agent, was already there, his bicycle propped against the porch. He was happy to show them round, he said, but most clients liked a first viewing on their own. Just give him a shout if they wanted him. He unlocked the front door and went to sit on the shallow stone steps that led up to it.
‘He looks as though he’s got a hell of a hangover,’ Edward said, and Diana answered, ‘He probably hates working on Saturday mornings.’
The house was empty, which Diana said she liked. The wallpaper was marked where pictures had hung, soot had fallen in the grates of the pretty fireplaces and paint had blistered on the shutters; there were a large number of prosperous spiders’ webs everywhere, the bathrooms both had green stains from dripping taps and the kitchen showed signs of mice. They saw it all: the bedrooms that were graded from the front of the house – grand then gradually becoming more and more spartan as they reached the back – the drawing room that had a double aspect, its large bow window looking out onto a walled garden, the dining room, with its serving hatch to the kitchen, the stone-floored larder, with its marble slabs and ancient flypapers studded with bluebottles, the ice-cold scullery and store room, and, at the very back, a dank little lavatory for servants.