Authors: Susan Moody
âHe can't help being a foreigner,' Orlando said.
âKraut lovers, kraut lovers . . .' Jeremy jeered at us.
I stared at him in astonishment. Over the years I'd known him, he had always been the quiet one, the fatherless boy with the straight-cut blond hair and red cheeks, who usually maintained a timid silence.
âThere's definitely something funny about him,' said Nicola. I sensed that while they waited for me, she had been playing them off, one against the other, and that now they were jockeying for position, each of them trying to outdo the other, each of them fearful that he would be elbowed out of Nicola's charmed circle.
Was I frightened of rejection too? Was I trying to make up some of the ground that had been lost that summer? Or did I feel some deeper alarm? Whichever it was, I suddenly said, âMaybe he's a spy.' Immediately I knew, Judas-like, that I had sacrificed Mr Elias, made him a burnt offering laid upon the altar of conformity. I passionately wished the words unsaid, but it was too late.
The boys pounced. âA spy? What do you mean? How can he be? How do you know?'
My credibility was at stake. âHe's got a radio,' I said reluctantly. âOne of those ones that spies use, with bits sticking out of the top. And headphones.'
âIt's true,' said Nicola. âI've seen it myself.'
âA crystal set,' said Orlando. He was staring at me with astonishment and a hostility that made me hot with shame.
âWhat kind of headphones?' asked Julian.
I backtracked quickly. âBut of course he can't be. The war's been over for ages.'
âThere's still lots of spies about,' announced Charles. âI heard about it at school. It's because of the Cold War.'
We could see that he didn't know exactly what the Cold War was and politely refrained from asking him.
âMaybe national security's at stake,' Jeremy said importantly, made knowledgeable by the
Rover
, which he borrowed surreptitiously from a friend.
âI think we ought to investigate,' said Julian. âI mean, if he's a spy and everything.'
âHow're you going to do that?' scoffed Nicola.
âWe could keep a watch on him.'
âYeah, follow him and everything. See where he goes.'
âWhy would a spy be living here?' I said.
âPrecisely,' added Orlando. âWhat's there for him to spy on in a place like this?'
âThe Marines,' said Charles. âIt's a naval establishment. They might be researching all sorts of stuff here.'
âLike what?'
Charles shrugged, trying to look as though he knew what he was talking about. âSubmarines, or something. Technical breakthroughs in naval warfare.'
âThat's what they do in Portsmouth, isn't it?' I said. âNot here.'
âWhat does it matter?' Nicola had that dangerous little flame in her eyes that I was coming to recognize. âHe's German, isn't he? That's evidence enough for me.'
The boys nodded doubtfully.
We went home, me hating myself, ashamed, Orlando haranguing me furiously. âHow could you have said something like that?' he demanded. âYou know as well as I do that the poor man's not a spy.'
The incident caused a rift between us all. For years we'd all spent our summers together, never articulating our affection for one another, but nonetheless relying on it, as part of the changeless predictability that was our childhood. Now Orlando would have nothing to do with the others and I found that I too didn't want to join them as they hung about on the green, swinging on the silver railings outside Mrs Sheffield's house, staring up at Sasha's window. Led by Nicola, they gave the Nazi salute if they saw him, or sang the Horst Wessel song in voices loud enough for him to hear if he listened. They followed him when he walked past the lifeboat into town; they followed him home again. Julian produced a notebook and pencil and kept an ostentatious record of his comings and goings.
Did he notice? Was he hurt, angered, or merely indifferent? I couldn't bring myself to ask.
Darkness came late on those hot August evenings, and our mothers could see no point in keeping to normal bedtime hours, so we were allowed to stay up much longer than usual. Miserably skulking along the back road to avoid them, I could see them lined up along the railings, taunting and catcalling.
Orlando finally told Fiona what they were doing, without divulging my part in it.
â
What
?' She was outraged. âTormenting that poor young man? But why?' She stared at me. âDo you know why, Alice?'
âThey . . .' I swallowed, avoiding Orlando's accusing gaze. âThey think he's a spy.'
âA spy? What, for Germany?'
âYes.'
âAre they so pigheadedly ignorant that they think a Jewish refugee would spy for Germany?' As she spoke, Fiona was walking towards the front door. âHave they no sense of compassion? Or common courtesy?'
She came back half an hour later. âI've put the fear of God into them. I told Charles and Julian that Colonel Tavistock would have been thoroughly ashamed of them if the poor man were here today, and that I'd have to think twice about allowing them into this house again. As for that Nicola . . .' She made a disgusted noise. âI'm a strong believer in independence, as you two know. I prefer to let you children make your own mistakes, which is why I don't often lay down the law. But there are times when it needs to be done.' She looked at me. âAlice, I'm very close to forbidding you to have anything more to do with that frightful girl.'
I glanced in appeal at Orlando but his face was stony. All my life he'd been my rock. Now he was rejecting me. âBut shouldn't we show compassion to her too?' I said in desperation, foreseeing that I would have to spend the rest of the holidays as a social outcast.
My mother raised a glacial eyebrow. âWhat exactly do you mean by that?'
âIsn't her father â' Too late I remembered my promise to Ava. ââ isn't he in prison or something?'
âAnd how do you know that?'
âOne of the boys told us,' Orlando lied easily. âCan't remember if it was Charles or Julian.' Neither of us dared to meet her eyes.
âThis is something you should never mention to anyone,' Fiona said. âAnd of course, we have to be understanding. On the other hand, whatever her family circumstances, they don't excuse the way she â and the others â are treating poor Sasha Elias.'
She looked at Orlando and her face softened. âI'd like a quick word with Alice on her own, if you don't mind,' she said.
Alarm and guilt pulsed through me. What had I done?
âI'll be in the garden,' Orlando said, as he opened the door to leave.
As soon as it had closed behind him, she said: âHow're you getting on with your music lessons?'
âAll right,' I muttered.
âWhy don't you play me something?' she said.
I was embarrassed, unused to so much attention. I launched into
The Fairy's Picnic
. If she was impressed, she didn't say so.
âHow do you get on with Mr Elias?' she asked. There was something in her tone that made me uneasy.
âFine. He's nice.'
âDoes he ever . . .'
â
What
?'
â. . . touch you?'
âOf
course
not.' My face burned. He did touch me from time to time, but not in the way that I suspected she meant.
âI've been told that he sometimes uses . . . um . . . inappropriate behaviour.'
âWho told you that?'
âLouisa Stone mentioned something.'
Nicola must have been saying things, either in order to divert attention from the campaign of terror she'd tried to initiate, or to excuse it. âWhat's inappropriate behaviour, anyway?'
âHe's never asked you to . . . to sit on his lap?' Fiona was almost as embarrassed as I was. âOr put his hand . . . on your knee? Or . . . um . . . elsewhere?'
âNo! If Nicola said that, she's lying. It's disgusting of you to say such things.'
âI'm only repeating something I was told.'
âIt's lies!' I shouted. âHe doesn't do
any
thing. Just teaches me the piano.'
âAre you telling me the truth, Alice?'
â
Yes
!'
âVery well. We won't mention it again. But if you ever have the slightestâ'
âI
won't
. He's not
like
that, not in the least.'
âVery well. I shall invite the poor man to dinner. Try to make up for the behaviour of your . . .
friends
.' She gave me an ice-cold stare. âIn fact, I'll invite them along too. It's time I had Lisa Tavistock round, and Louisa Stone.'
âGood God,' Yelland said later, told of the impending supper-party. âShe's not seriously contemplating having people to dinner, is she?'
âThat's quite enough, Mr Yelland,' said Ava.
âMore than enough,' Orlanda said.
âWhat did you say, you rude little sod?' demanded Yelland.
âNow, now.' Ava reached into her mending basket for more grey wool to darn Orlando's school socks, ready for the end of the holidays. âWhen she puts her mind to it, Mrs Beecham can be a very good cook. Very inventive.'
âInventive says it all.'
âShe's going to invite Nicola Stone and her mother.' Orlando twitched an eyebrow. âThat'll be a real treat. Don't you agree, Mr Yelland?'
âWhy the hell should I find some minx of a schoolgirl a treat?'
âI just thought you might.'
He was obviously being significant in some way, but I didn't know how, and had no desire to ask him.
Mr Elias came the next Friday. I contrived to sit next to him at the big mahogany table. With the PGs, the mothers, Nicola, Julian and Charles, Jeremy Gardiner, we were crowded, so that I couldn't avoid touching Sasha Elias's arm or thigh every time one or other of us moved. I'd changed out of my usual Aertex shirt and shorts, and put on a summer dress; my newly-short hair was freshly washed, and I was wearing the turquoise-and-silver necklace my father had given me for my last birthday.
Orlando noticed â he noticed everything â but made no comment. Which was much worse than if he had. I felt soft, as though I were moulded out of marshmallow, yet at the same time, I burned with a heat I couldn't define, so much so that my mother wondered aloud whether I'd spent too much time in the sun that afternoon. I shook my head.
Did he think I looked pretty? Was he aware of the curl of hair over my left eye, achieved by sleeping with my hair secured in criss-crossed kirby grips? Had he noticed my necklace? Did he feel the flame coursing through my body when our arms accidentally brushed? Jealousy seared me as he talked with Fiona and Orlando about music. I was the one who knew him best; he wasn't theirs, he was mine, wasn't he?
E
ach holiday had its own ceremonies but the summer offered another ritual which was exclusive to Orlando and me. We were the blackberry pickers, and we took our duties very seriously. We saw our role as that of hunters and gatherers, bringing home provisions that would see the family through the coming winter. The blackberries would be made into jam, or added to the big greasy-skinned cooking apples Fiona managed to obtain from a nearby farmer. She and Ava would spend a day turning them into the blackberry-and-apple which constituted our staple pudding until the following summer, either in pies or as tarts, or eaten with custard or evaporated milk. Without our annual contribution, we feared that the rest of the household might go hungry.
At the start of each summer holidays, we would pump up the tyres of our bikes and cycle down the coast road to inspect our blackberry sites. We knew from experience that the denser the thickets of brambles, the juicier and sweeter were the fruit. We chose only the most inaccessible places, where the heavily-thorned fronds would deter everyone but the most dogged picker; if we saw broken branches or plastic bags, evidence of picnickers, we would pass by.
Through the summer weeks, we kept a close eye on our chosen locations, going out every few days to inspect them and make sure that the ripening process was proceeding to schedule. We loved the salt winds in our hair as we free-wheeled along the road which ran below the cliffs, the smell of crushed fennel, the occasional wizened crab-apple trees which had somehow flourished in among the brambles, the flat scented plates of elderflowers which would later become rich with dark bunches of fruit.
The blackberries ripened early that last summer. Orlando and I visited them every few days, watching as the hard green berries began to fill out, to turn hard and red then plumply purple. Now they were definitely black and lustrous, almost ready for the picking. We'd done our reconnaissance carefully, earmarked the places likely to provide the highest yield for the lowest effort, searched out the hidden patches where other, less experienced pickers, might not venture.
We had refined our picking techniques over the years. Our equipment included two of Aunt's walking sticks, one of the golf clubs from the elephant's-foot stand, punnets for picking into, bowls for carrying. We had to choose the right clothes. That year, an old jacket of my father's to protect Orlando's bare summer arms, a sweater of Callum's for me.
As serious blackberry pickers, we seldom spoke as we reaped our harvest, and almost never ate any of the ripe black fruit. That year, while I learned to play the piano in the close fug of Mr Elias's bed-sitting room, Orlando spent a lot of time cycling up to the cliffs.
One afternoon, I came away from a piano lesson to find him dawdling by the gate of Mrs Sheffield's house, holding both our bikes. âI've found a new place,' he said. âCome and look. I don't think anyone's ever been there except me.'
And indeed, when I cycled down the chalky white road after him, and climbed between elder-trees and overgrown fennel to the top of the hill, I could see that he was right. There were none of the broken branches or trodden grass which signified trespassers into what we had come to look on as our own territories.