Married Love (14 page)

Read Married Love Online

Authors: Tessa Hadley

Coming up to the table while she was helping get all the children into their places, Ed said something extraordinary to Julie. — Don’t take
your
top off, he said in an undertone, quite seriously, like an instruction: as if he had really thought she might be tempted to. Luckily no one except Julie noticed it.

— Put them away now, Cordy, Stella said, bringing out the meat on a plate. — I’d hate them to get splashed with gravy.

Stella and Cordelia were vegetarians, but Stella always cooked meat for the others: this time a leg of Exmoor lamb with garlic and rosemary, the skin crisp and salty and blackened, the inside pink. Julie was concentrating on getting Frankie, her three-year-old, to sit still in his chair. He was over-excited after a game where all the children had hurled themselves at top speed down a grassy slope on to an old mattress they had dragged out from one of the barns. Frankie’s face was red and wet with sweat, and he was bouncing crazily and arhythmically in
his
seat. His cousin Laurence, the gang leader, aged eight, encouraged him from across the table.

— Hey, Frankie!

— Hey, Laurie!

— Frankie, you’re a pain, said Ed.

Roland, his older son, who was more obedient, watched Frankie reproachfully. Laurence bounced hard too, Frankie wriggled out of Julie’s grip to bounce again, Ivan pleaded with Laurence in an undertone in French. Ivan’s mother was French, he and Rose were bringing the children up to be bilingual.

— Hey, Laurence! Stella was a loved grandmother but also fearsome, so that the children watched her carefully.

— Stop
now
, matey, or you’ll be sent inside.

Rose and Ivan blushed and suffered at the threat of punishment.

Stella assessed anxiously what she put on to Ed’s plate. — Is it cooked?

— It’s good, said Ed, eating hungrily: he loved his mother’s food. He was relaxing into the family as usual now, after his initial stand-off. He sat next to Stella; Colin sat at the other end of the table between his daughters and his old mother. Vera had a white linen napkin tucked in under her chin. Seth was telling them funny stories about working for a theatre director Colin knew.

— So what’s this I hear about you being on the telly, Mother? Ed said.

He and his sisters could get away with calling the television the telly, and watching all the worst programmes.

— You mustn’t see it, darling, Stella said. — It would
be
bad for your Oedipus complex. The girls tell me I’m very gorgeous.

— I’m immune, said Ed. — You’re not my type. What is it that you’re saying, on this programme?

— That’s the real mystery. Coming out of what certainly looks like my mouth used to look, are all these words that I’m sure I’ve never spoken.

— Such as?

Stella forked up a piece of Persian spinach pancake. — How about: ‘It’s important not to exaggerate the importance of libertarian elements in the processes of revolution.’

— You didn’t really say that?

— She did! said Cordelia. — And ‘The future is on the streets of Paris and Berlin.’

— That’s the question. Was it me? It
looked
like me. But I have no memory of ever owning any such statements. Yet I sounded so certain.

Ed took more of the potatoes roasted in olive oil. — You old Maoist you.

— It’s easy to make fun, Stella said. — I don’t know which is more desolating: thinking how wrong I was then, or thinking that now I don’t believe in anything with that certainty. Nothing political, anyway. Nobody does, do they?

— I don’t know what I believe, said Julie, and then thought that she had drunk enough wine, she ought to stop.

— What I can actually remember about making that programme has nothing to do with ideas.

— I thought you couldn’t remember it at all, Rose said.

— It’s coming back to me. But only that I was meeting someone afterwards. All the time we were hanging about in the studio, having our make-up done, frightening the bourgeoisie, I was on fire with the boy I was going to meet. The man. I suppose they were men, by then.

— Oh, Mum! You
were
wicked.

— Why did that stuff get saved in my memory, and not what I believed in?

— What she remembers out of that welter of revolutionary fervour is me, Colin suggested, triumphant, from down the table.

Stella shook her head. — Not you. It wasn’t you.

Julie looked to see if Colin minded it not having been him, but he didn’t seem to, he was still beaming proudly at Stella.

Before Stella brought out the summer pudding, Colin banged his glass with his knife as if he wanted to make a speech.

— Oh, must you? Stella said.

Julie had known Colin from the radio and television, presenting various arts programmes, years before she went out with Ed. His screen persona was hard and rigorous and exact; she was surprised when she met him by how soft and pleased with himself he seemed, as if he only taxed himself when he was performing. Contracted to fit the television, his handsome plump
brown
face and thick white hair intensified and deepened; in real life she found him inaccessible behind a vague easy friendliness, although he knew lots of interesting things.

— I’m going to sing, he announced, enjoying the chorus of groans. — For Stella’s birthday.

— Oh God, said Ed to Stella. — Not his Geordie childhood, please.

— But I love the songs, Stella said.

When she and Colin were first married he was still a singer on the folk circuit.

— Sair fyeld hinny. That translates for you southerners as ‘sore failed hinny’. Sair fyeld noo. ‘Sore failed now, sore failed hinny, since I knew you.’

— Cheerful, said Cordelia.

— It’s a poignant lament for lost youth. An old man sings it to an oak tree.

— Oh dear. Vera smiled round the table in wonder at her clever son.

— To an oak tree? I thought hinny was a girl. His girlfriend.

— Well, that’s what he calls the old oak tree. It’s an endearment.

Colin’s voice was still good, strong and velvety, and he sang without any affectation, not putting on the folk style that he had learned in his youth. It made a good moment, the family assembled in the long grass of the orchard under the apple trees, all lightly drunk on the white wine, the children drunk from their play, the song in its power drawing the meaning of the day together,
looping
them all into one true feeling that cleared their heads for more spacious and open thoughts.

Aa was young and lusty aa was fair and clear

Aa was young and lusty many’s a long year

When I was five and twenty a could loup a dyke

Noo a’m five and sixty aa can barely step a syke
.

Thus spoke the ould man to the oak tree

Sair fyeld is aa sin a kenned thee!

Julie caught the eye of Cordelia’s boyfriend and knew that he was watching them all, uncertain how to fit in with this family and their unashamed grand gestures.

— Do you remember that one, Nana? Ed called to Vera down the table. — Did you use to sing that up in Newcastle when Dad was a kid?

— I don’t think so, pet, said Vera vaguely.

Later, when the children had gone off with Stella to feed the horses, and Julie and Ed were stacking the dishes from the table in a big basket to carry into the kitchen, Ed put his arms around her from behind, and kissed her on her back, naked where her dress plunged down. ‘Aa was young and lusty many’s a long year,’ he imitated, muffled against her skin, so that she knew he had been listening to his father even though he had pretended only to be weary at his showing off. She also knew that he was apologising for his moodiness earlier, and perhaps for the remark about taking her top off, although he might have just thought that was sensible advice. She
wasn’t
really angry with him; she had talked with Stella about how it was difficult for Ed, trying to make a career as a critic and writer and trying to do it differently to Colin – Ed wanted to be more subtle, more sceptical, less ripe – but always having to operate in the blurring broad shadow of his father. It was no wonder he behaved badly sometimes, returned into his parents’ orbit.

At the end of the afternoon Julie went for a walk by herself. The curtains were pulled shut across the windows in the living room again, and the children were watching a film, something Colin had been sent that was only just out in the cinemas. Stella and Cordelia had taken the horses out, Rose was with the children, Ivan was practising, Ed and Colin both had articles to finish. Julie had only meant to step outside for a few minutes, but once she began to walk down the path that led along the fields and through the copse of beech trees, there seemed no reason to turn back; they could all manage without her for half an hour. Alone, she felt returned with intensity inside herself, aware of the breathing lifting her chest and the suddenly awakened noise of her thoughts rushing in the hollow of her skull. Yellow light slanted low across the path from between the trees; little birds scuffled in the undergrowth or flitted among the leaves like tricks of sight. A wood pigeon took off from a branch with a startling racket, its wingbeats like shots. It was a lovely English summer’s afternoon: she had longed to escape into it, but as she walked it remained outside of her, as if she was walking through a commercial, or an estate agent’s brochure.

Stella and Colin weren’t really country people. Ten years ago, not long before Julie first met them, they had given up their London life. Julie and Ed lived now in the converted bottom half of the tall Georgian terraced house in Highbury that had been Ed’s childhood home; the top half was let out and the rents went to Rose and Cordelia. As she walked Julie was thinking about the way the young Stella on the television programme had talked about revolution, speaking the word as if it was a knife kept hidden under her clothes, gleaming and glamorous; she could imagine nursing that hope of some violent adjustment, recharging life with its truth. Sometimes Julie was afraid of how experience now seemed thin and used up, as if her children were the only real thing. Because terrible things happening in other places were so close, on the television and the Internet and in the newspapers, even the solidity of these old hills and woods could seem worn paper-thin. Outwardly the countryside looked the same as it did a hundred years ago, as if there was a wholesome continuity preserved here, safe against change; but that was a delusion. For a start, all the cottages that must have once belonged to poor people were done up now and sold for a fortune to people from the cities.

She was nervous when she heard the noise of someone else moving in the woods behind her, twigs cracking underfoot; probably it was someone from the village walking their dog. She should have brought Tray, too, as a pretext for being here: only she’d slipped away without meaning to come more than a few yards. Looking back she saw Seth, the actor, approaching along the path, his
white
T-shirt flickering in the shade; he called out and waved to her, and she waited, feeling the sun hot on her in a patch of light where trees had been cut down. After lunch she had put on one of Ed’s shirts over her dress and she had been glad of it in the cool of the copse. She was pleased to have Seth’s company; as he came close her sour thoughts drew off some little distance, as if he was surrounded with a stronger force of pleasurable energy; when he asked if he could get through to the cottage this way, she said she would show him. Because he wore his black hair in a glossy mass to his shoulders, his looks reminded her of the Assyrian kings in the lion hunts she’d taken the boys to see in the British Museum; he had the same slanting cheekbones, although instead of warrior-like he was funny and friendly. He wasn’t much taller than she was, not six foot; around one wrist, she noticed, he wore a gold chain, and the brown skin of his arms was speckled with dark pores; he had a warm male smell she enjoyed, like hazelnut oil. He explained that he’d thought he ought to take a couple of hours out, he had some lines to learn. They walked on together through the trees, and then along the side of a field planted with tall elephant grass for biofuel. Seth said he’d thought it was wheat. — Shit, I’ve hardly ever been in the country before. What are those? He pointed to some sheep in the next field. — Cows? Rabbits?

— Come on, you must have been to the country. At least as a kid, on a trip or something.

— I’ve always been meaning to get round to it.

— It’s lovely here, she said. — Look at the view.

The view from the top of the field really was good, they could see all round them: the sea behind, Exmoor to the south, and close at hand the patched cloth of little ancient fields, some worn into a corduroy of ridged sheep runs, draped across a relief of steep hills and valleys so convoluted that Julie was never sure which hamlet or which woods she was looking at, although she came here often. They dropped to sit beside the Dutch barn, with a few bleached hay bales left over in it from last year. Julie knew that an unspoken alliance between them had begun at lunch, when their eyes met over Colin’s song, the outsiders in the family. Seth smoked a cigarette. — I was too frightened to smoke at the house, he said. — Cordy’s old lady’s fairly intimidating.

— Do you see the cottage from here? Julie said. — But I’ll come down with you, it’s on my way back.

— I really just wanted to clear my head, he said. — I’ll probably just fall asleep over my script anyway.

— Is this
Emmerdale
? she said. — Are you really the doctor?

— There I was thinking you might be a fan.

— Perhaps I’ll watch it now, just to see you.

— Do me a favour. I’d rather you didn’t. It’s so funny. I’ve just broken up with my girlfriend.

— You don’t mean Cordelia?

— On
Emmerdale
. The actress was already in Australia when they decided to write her out, so we couldn’t actually have the break-up, I had to do it on the phone, only of course there wasn’t anyone on the other end, it was only me all by myself, ranting into nothingness. ‘What
do
you mean, you think I haven’t made enough commitment to this relationship?’ ‘How can you say that I’m a selfish bastard who only cares about his work?’

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