Marking Time (38 page)

Read Marking Time Online

Authors: Elizabeth Jane Howard

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Sagas

But when she arrived at Battle, and found dear Viola there to meet her, instead of having to take a cab or an uneasy drive with Tonbridge, she was overcome again. Miss Milliment sat in the front
of Viola’s car while she and the porter stowed her suitcases in the boot, trying to quench this awful desire to break down.

‘There. All safely stowed.’ Viola got into the driving seat. ‘We’ll soon be home. Miss Milliment!’ For she had not been able to stop herself after all. It had all
poured out. Her fear of becoming useless, of not knowing how to get through the remainder of her life. Of being a nuisance – she really didn’t want to be a nuisance, she kept saying as
the tears ran down into the folds of her chins. And Viola’s kindness (she was so
very
kind!) seemed stupidly to make her cry more. Explanations, apologies, even excuses of which, in
her ordinary frame of mind, she would deeply have disapproved, streamed out . . . She needed to feel
useful
; she had been useful to dear Papa, and by the time he died she had found
teaching was the only thing she could do that fulfilled that need. She was afraid that she might be getting too old to be much more use. She did not want charity – to feel that people had to
put up with her when she could do nothing. She was afraid that she was a little tired: the cab driver had refused to go upstairs in her lodging house to fetch the suitcases, and her landlady would
not help. One of them had slipped from her hand on the staircase and fallen right to the bottom where it had burst open, and it had been very difficult to repack – so this was only the
consequence of fatigue and Viola should not take it seriously. She had saved some money, of course, but she did not really know where she could go that would make it last. This last made her blush
from her hot forehead downwards and she was instantly ashamed to have mentioned that part of the subject at all. And Viola listened, with an arm round her heaving shoulders, and gave her a
handkerchief and actually said, ‘Dear Miss Milliment, you will never be abandoned. I promise you. We owe you so much.’ Blessed words! Comfort, affection, the restoration of some kind of
dignity! Then Viola had asked her whether she would like to have a cup of tea at the Gateway Tea Rooms, an offer which, as she had not felt like the pastry she had bought on Charing Cross Station,
that when opened, looked as though it was filled with a dead mouse, she most gratefully accepted. They had had tea and scones and Viola had said that of course she didn’t know exactly what
the future held – clearly they would not stay in Sussex when the war was over – but that whatever they did, Miss Milliment must find a home with them. This last had endangered her
equilibrium all over again; Viola had quickly stopped talking about it. Instead, she reminded her most delightfully of old times – when Sir Hubert had been alive and she had gone to Albert
Place to teach dear Viola and Jessica, and how they always knew that it was nearly lunch-time because the housemaid came into the schoolroom to change the lace curtains, which, fresh that morning,
would be grey with soot by noon – particularly in winter when there were the pea soup fogs.

‘Those fogs! Do you remember, Miss Milliment? We hardly ever have a fog like those were, do we?’ And so on. It was pleasant and soothing. Then she had got hiccups which was most
embarrassing in a public place, but Viola had laughed and made her repeat the old saw: ‘Hiccup – ticcup – three drops in a teacup – stops hiccups,’ which she had
taught both Viola and her sister all those years ago.

‘My aunt May taught me that,’ she said. ‘Oh dear! I’m afraid I shall have to do it all over again.’

‘It is very agreeable to talk about old times,’ she said as they went back to the car. ‘Oh dear! I am so sorry!’ One of the handles on her extremely battered and ancient
handbag had broken, and as it was too full to shut properly, pencils, a leather purse that was held shut by a paper clip, spectacle case, a number of hairpins and an unspeakable comb fell onto the
pavement. As Villy bent to retrieve these things, she resolved to buy her a new bag, but knew better than to say so.

In the car they talked about her present pupils, beginning with Lydia, whose concentration, Miss Milliment admitted, left something to be desired, but who had showed distinct improvement during
the summer term. ‘I do try not to
loom
over them during the holidays,’ she added. ‘It must be most tiresome to have a governess who never goes away.’

‘I was wondering,’ she added a few moments later, ‘whether you would object to my teaching Lydia on her own in the afternoons. She could join the older girls in the mornings
for our reading aloud, but I fear it is discouraging to do everything with the great girls, who naturally are far ahead of her in other subjects.’

Villy said that she thought this was a good idea.

When they reached Home Place, she carted Miss Milliment’s frighteningly heavy suitcases up the narrow stairs to her room and kissed the soft wrinkled cheek which was another
extraordinarily pleasant (and unusual) experience for Miss Milliment.

Tonight, being a Friday, she would be dining with the family, which she did twice a week. The other evenings she ate early with Lydia and Neville. She had suggested this arrangement, as it
released Ellen from having to preside over the children’s supper just when she was needed to bath Wills and Roly. As she struggled into her mustard and brown outfit, still described by her to
herself as her best, she reflected that she had not bought any new clothes for about two years – had felt that she ought to save as much as possible against the rainy days. But since that
most comforting talk with dear Viola, she had no excuse, and if they brought in clothes rationing, she would be rather in the soup, she thought, as she hunted through the pile of odd stockings to
pick out the two shades of buff that most nearly matched. She would have to go to Hastings on the bus, and
then
find a shop that sold things for larger people, but she could hardly ask
anyone to accompany her, as one could not buy things like underwear excepting by oneself. She had never been any good with her needle, and almost everything had by now got past mending, anyway:
there were huge ladders in her lock-knit bloomers, holes of varying sizes in her two cardigans, and she often had to fasten things round her with safety pins, which occasionally burst open causing
the most disagreeable sensations of pricking – not to mention the anticipation of worse embarrassment. ‘You must pull yourself together, Eleanor, and refurbish your wardrobe.’

It took her a long time to dress, partly because she kept stopping to look out of the window to see what the fading light was doing to the tops of the trees in the wood. The pines became smoky,
and the oaks more livid in their watery bronze – she could not describe their hues; sere was a very useful word for poets, she thought, romantic and non-committal, but if one was painting the
trees it would not do at all. And then below the wood was a steep grassy bank, in spring richly decorated with primroses and later, more delicate still, with wild strawberries and the dark purple
vetch, stitchwort, scarlet pimpernel, all flowers she had grown up with in her youth. Now only the ferns and grass remained, but it had a different beauty – a natural dense border above which
the trees rose with majestic grace. The courtyard in the foreground was full of warm, domestic colour: cobblestones, the slaty blocks so often laid outside stables (easy to wash down and how
beautiful when they were wet – now, alas, only from rain!) and a mellow brick path that ran unaccountably across it and ended by the kitchen garden wall where once there had been a door,
blocked off. The narrow rosy bricks were tufted with moss and weeds, but this simply added to their charm. She had spent what must have amounted to hours surveying this scene, originally in the
hope that thereafter she would only have to shut her eyes to recall it, now simply from pleasurable habit. She had once – only once – unearthed her aunt May’s ancient box of
water-colours and attempted to paint what she saw, but she was hampered by the state of the paints, all dry and cracked and unwilling to yield their colours, and the single paintbrush in the small
black box had lost most of its hairs and was intent upon losing what remained. It had been absurd even to try, but in spite of her failure the attempt had absorbed and excited her to such an extent
that Polly had been sent over to fetch her for supper.

‘And you will be late now, if you do not pull your socks up, Eleanor,’ she admonished herself. Socks would have been one thing; stockings were quite another. She had to sit on the
bed, with one foot upon a chair to pull them on, and
then
she had the difficult business of easing the garters up her leg to the required height. Too low, and the stockings immediately
formed lazy wrinkles round her ankles the moment she stood up; too far and the constriction was unpleasant and, she felt, probably not good for her. Sometimes she slept in them in order not to have
the ordeal next day. But one could not wear grey stockings with dark brown and therefore the change on these evenings was necessary. The little bathroom was on the ground floor, so she washed her
face and hands on her way out.

As she zig-zagged lightly across the courtyard with the delightful prospect of a warm room full of familiar people and the glass of sherry that was accorded her on these occasions, she thought
how very fortunate she was: none of this would have happened in Lady Rydal’s day. And after dinner she could spend a happy evening with a hot-water bottle (the cottage was not very warm)
searching through Evelyn for interesting references to trees that might prove useful to old Mr Cazalet. Really the only thing missing in her life were galleries and the pictures they had contained.
But when one considered the dreadful things that were happening – she read
The Times
every day of her life when the family had finished with it – this was a small thing, and
she felt ungrateful even to have thought of it.

Rachel sat on the shrouded unmade bed in her room at Chester Terrace looking at a photograph of herself with her brothers, taken soon after the first war when they were all
together again. Edward was still in uniform, very debonair, smiling, with an arm round her shoulder. Hugh stood a little apart: his arm was in a sling, his Norfolk jacket hung loosely on him and he
looked as though the sun hurt his eyes. Rupert, in an open-necked shirt and looking incredibly young, had just finished laughing at something. The photograph had been taken on the croquet lawn at
the house they had had in Totteridge, before they all moved to London. The Brig had taken it: he had been an eager, not to say interminable photographer in those days and had, of course, taken five
or six pictures on that occasion. This was the best, and it had sat, framed on her dressing table, for years. Now, like everything else in the room, it had been put away in the wardrobe wrapped in
tissue paper. She wanted it for Clary. She shut up the wardrobe, which still contained a row of evening dresses and her ermine wrap given her by the Brig when she was twenty-one. There seemed to be
no point in moving
them
to Sussex. The cupboard smelled of camphor, her dressing table was bare and dusty.

She started to descend the flights of stairs – her bedroom was on the sixth floor – stopping at the drawing room to make sure that the furniture was still entirely covered with dust
sheets, the smaller carpets rolled up, the very large one covered by an immense drugget, the shutters properly fastened. The chandelier hung safely in its huge linen bag like a gigantic pear
waiting to ripen. The room, indeed the whole house, had the heavy, dull air characteristic of fully furnished houses that are uninhabited. She wondered if they would ever live there again. On the
ground floor in the hall were the packing cases now full of books that she had been sent to London by the Brig to collect. Tonbridge would superintend their loading onto one of the firm’s
lorries next week. She was tired, and longed for a cup of tea, but the water and gas were turned off and in any case there was no milk.

She decided to walk across the park to Baker Street and catch a bus that would take her nearly to Maida Vale, although there would be another walk after that to reach Sid’s house. A taxi
would be extravagant, although she knew that Sid would scold her for not taking one . . .

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