Authors: Robert Barnard
âA little drive? In my nightie? Not on your life!'
âJulia, this is something so ⦠so big, so awesome ⦠You've got to come down so I can explain.'
âI'm surprised you haven't said that it's bigger than both of us.'
David's face screwed up in distress.
âDon't be like that, Julia â not satirical and bitter, not at a time like this. It is bigger than both of us. That's exactly it.'
âFax me about it in the morning, eh?'
His face twisted in anger.
âYou've always had a trivial mind, do you know that? You've always failed to live up to your position.'
âMy position?'
âYour destiny. I shouldn't be surprised that you're falling so far beneath it now.'
âDavid, all I want now is my bed.'
âThat's because you don't understand.' His voice took on a pleading tone. âCome down, we'll go for a drive, and I'll
make
you understand what's got to happen.'
She was genuinely bewildered.
â
Got
to happen?'
âYes. What ⦠what all this has been leading up to.'
âIt's not up to us to say what's got to happen.'
âOf course it is. You'll see why when I tell you what's happened.'
âWhat's happened? Have you done anything silly, David?'
His voice rose in exasperation.
âOf course I haven't! It's not a question of what I've done.'
âKeep quiet. You'll waken the children.'
âThe children are at your parents' for the last week of the holiday, as you very well know. You're trying to get rid of me.'
âAll right David, I'm trying to get rid of you. I've had enough of this, and I'm going back to bed.'
She started to close the window, and as she fumbled with the latch she heard David cry: âNo, don't do that, Julia. Come down and listen to what I've got to say.'
Julia sat at the kitchen table and took out a cigarette from the packet lying there. âSilly bugger,' she said to herself. âAnybody'd think he'd gone soft in the head.'
In the silence his voice, more distant now, came to her, still anguished.
âYou've failed, Julia. You've been through a test, and you've failed. You're an icon with feet of clay. You'll never realise the greatness that's in you.'
Julia puffed out a neat ring of smoke: whatever were the neighbours going to say in the morning? Silly really, that
she still cared what people said about her. At least in this case it was an ex-husband they'd be talking about, not a lover.
She heard with relief a car door slam, then the sound of tyres screaming on tarmac. It was five o'clock. She wondered whether to turn on the radio and try to find a news summary, but decided not to bother. As she went back towards the bedroom she heard a dull boom in the distance. Probably thunder, she thought, though she hadn't sensed a storm in the air. She slipped into bed, lay back luxuriously, then let her hands play over the smooth olive skin of Mehmet, the young man from the kebab takeaway who had delivered her order five nights ago and had been with her pretty well continuously ever since.
The trouble with David, she thought, is that he goes the whole hog with everything. Just so far and no further, that was Julia's motto.
Miss Trim, the English teacher and form mistress of 6A, looked around at the eleven year olds staring stolidly back at her. âThe essay topic for your Easter break,' she said, then paused solemnly. She had begun to sense a giggle going through her class every time she set the inevitable âHow I spent my school holidays' as the vacation task. This time they were going to get a surprise:
âis “How I spent the last day of my holidays.”'
She was disappointed, because she sensed an identical giggle going around the class. She frowned like a disappointed fish, her protuberant eyes glaring through the rimless spectacles until she noticed that Morgan Fairclough was already setting down the odd note on a piece of rough paper. She did not ask herself how Morgan could be making notes for an essay on the last day of his holidays when the holiday had not yet begun. She approved of Morgan: solid and hard-working, though these virtues were tinged with arrogance when he talked
to his less gifted classmates. But his estimable qualities were so much better than brilliance or flair that she looked forward to reading his account.
Morgan began his account two days after the day in question. He knew it was going to be hard to get the facts and angle right. He was after all the son of a writer. And he had to use mostly fact. There were still so many around who knew the facts: Mum, Deirdre, Timothy, Samantha
â¦
Morgan licked the point of his Uniball and began.
Â
HOW I SPENT THE LAST DAY OF MY HOLIDAYS
Morgan Fairclough, aged 11.
Â
Please excuse all spelling mistakes. My dad has not tought me to use a dictionery as he promised to do in the holidays.
Â
While she was clearing away breakfast things my mum said: âAre you planning to have one almighty row over lunch, or would you prefer this time to have a series of minor explosions going off throughout the day?'
My father stretched, smiling a narsty smile.
âI think the latter, all things considered. Or maybe it would be fun to have no row at all. Have them waiting nervously all the time for something that never comes.'
âOh, very suttle,' said my mother. âAnyone would think they were not family but enemies.'
âCan't they be both? I must say that's how I regard them.'
All this I'd heard over and over in previous years. By
now it sounded rehearsed, like a play. One of my dad's plays. Rows were an everyday occurrence in our house, and the terms of the rows never really altered.
âYou only regard them as enemies because they're my family,' said my mum.
âThey can be your family and still be your enemies,' said Dad. âIn fact I remember when you and I were courting, you and Deirdre were constantly at each other's throats. Both of you were feisty girls after all.'
âNow you're being ridiculous,' said Mum. âOf course I love Deirdre, and did then.'
But I noticed Mum disappeared into the kitchen and began the washing up. Running away from a fight â that's how I saw it.
âAnyway,' said my mother ten minutes later, coming back with her arms white from soapsuds, âafter all these yearly rows they won't come expecting a good time.'
âI don't know why we don't stop asking them,' said Dad. âThey don't ask us to Greenacre Manor. Probably afraid we'll use the wrong knives and forks.'
Deirdre's husband Timothy had sold his father's car hire companies when he inherited them and bought into traditional bricks and mortar, playing the squire to the point of ridiculousness (these are my dad's words â he can be very spiteful). Uncle Timothy is Head of Religious Broadcasting at the BBC. Dad says his religion is tweed suiting, pipe-smoking and
Brideshead Revisited.
âI think you're right,' said Mum. âJust make a row big enough to justify it and I'll put my oar in and suggest we call it a day. It will follow naturally if we do that.'
âHmmm. Not a bad idea,' said Dad. But I could tell he was having second thoughts about his proposal. He always gave the impression of enjoying himself in these annual rows, and I must admit I thought they were quite fun.
âI like Uncle Timothy,' I said. âSome of the things he says make me laugh.'
âThey make me laugh too,' said Dad. âLike his pretending to be still in love with Deirdre after all this time.'
âSo the row is still on the schedule,' said my mother. âIs after the walk the best time for staging it? Because that's what it is: a little play, stored away for when, if ever, you write your own
Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf.
'
âIf that's what I'm aiming for the rows would have to be with you, Lois.'
âWell, God knows, you've had enough experience of them. Oh shit â that's them now.'
My father cast an eye at the window, the Rolls outside, and the path that led from the front gate.
âOh, God Almighty!'
For a household containing not one Believer we were very free with God's name. When I wrenched my eyes away from Auntie Deirdre, who looked as if she was carrying a shopping basket in front of her under her dress, I caught a look on Dad's face that was a mixture of relish and foreknowledge. He'd known in advance!
Exclamations took up the first two minutes of the visit.
âWell, this is a surprise!'
âExactly what it was to us too.'
âHow far are you gone, Deirdre?'Â
âDo you know what it is?'
âSamantha, are you looking forward to having a brother or sister?'
This welcome on the front door mat was quite convincing. It was led by my dad, who, being a playwrite of sorts, knew what people tended to say on all kinds of occasions. Mum hugged her sister, perhaps to hide the horrid display of jealousy on her face. Whatever Deirdre had Mum had to be jealous of, even if she would have died rather than be pregnant again.
âNo, we weren't “trying” as they say,' said Deirdre, her voice high and a bit strident, âand yes we are delighted, the feetus is five months old, we're doing all the right things that doctors and nurses recommend. All right? Sensation over?'
And she steamed ahead into the sitting room as if her shopping basket gave her all the rights of the lady of the house. There was a sparkle in her eye that suggested that she, like me, had something up her sleeve.
âTim? what will you have?' gushed my father. âAnd Deirdre, what can you have?'
âI'll risk a gin and tonic,' said Uncle Timothy. âWe go on the principle of “one off, all off” in our household, but I'm on leave at the moment. Deirdre will have pineapple juice, won't you, darling?'
âYes, darling, and so will you. The fact that we are away from our own household doesn't let you off the “no alcohol” regimen.'
Timothy sighed.
âI would swear if the children weren't here. All my
abstention valued as nothing if I have one little lapse.'
âGo away, children,' said Dad, waving an artistic hand towards the garden. âYour uncle doesn't like being found out, Morgan.'
When we got outside in the hallway I put my finger to my lips and we listened for a minute or two to the conversation.
âSo, then, you're happy are you?' my father asked. âNot just putting a brave face on a nasty accident?'
âWe're over the moon! We talk baby talk all the time, and discuss colours for the nursery. We're even more delighted than Samantha.'
âMaybe she's too old to be totally pleased. At three â yes. At thirteen â no. They feel they'll degenerate into the resident babysitter.'
âI didn't realise you knew so much about growing families, Bernard.'
âI have a creative writer's understanding of how people think and feel, Timothy.'
Same old dialogue. Dad as a scriptwriter ought to have been able to think up something better, or at least different. Samantha and I shook our heads and moved over towards the kitchen door, where Aunt Deirdre and Lois my mum were well away.
âI'm not going to pretend it didn't come as a shock,' said Auntie D. âWe didn't take out all our old Noddy books and Paddington Bears and look forward to reading them at bedtimes over and over again. But when all is said, Catholics are right about abortion. It is murder, and just thinking about it we
felt
like murderers. I've settled down
to all the rules and the deprivations ⦠This martini is heaven, though.'
âYou're a bit mean not letting Tim off his oath of abstention, I feel.'
âTimothy has nothing to complain of. Do you think he hasn't got a stash of booze somewhere in the house, if only I could find it? ⦠But really, sis, you ought to try a late pregnancy.'
âI can't think of a single reason why I should.'
âYou wouldn't believe how
different
pregnancy is in the twenty-first century. And almost always for the better. We had Morgan and Samantha at pretty much the same time, didn't we?'
âYes, we did. Almost as if there was some kind of competition.'
Deirdre waved away the suggestion with a
well-manicured
hand.
âOh, we were silly about some things then. But pregnancy is not what it was â it's easier, more straightforward. I tell you: you should try it.'
âNot on your life,' said Mum.
âDon't you dare!' I shouted.
âMorgan â vamoose,' called Mum. âThis is girls' talk.'
We didn't vamoose, and they started up again immediately. I waited until I was sick of the anatomical details (many of which I knew already), and then I made off towards the garden. I was rather surprised (because I count her even lower than the earthworm) when Samantha followed me. She started in on why she had come out â she felt in a position to give advice.
âDon't let my mum persuade yours to have another baby,' she said.
âShe won't,' I said dismissively. âI was more than enough for her.'
âI was quite pleased at first. Not delighted, but quite pleased. Then I thought that this is the age when I should be getting more freedom. What shall I get in fact?'
âTwenty-four hour slavery.'
âRight. Unpaid babysitter. Changing nappies non-stop. They're indescribably smelly and nasty, including the instantly disposable ones. I know she'll be poohing the whole time.'
âShe?'
âMummy pretends to Daddy that she doesn't know, but she does. It's a she. And Daddy does desperately want a son and heir. Greenacre Manor will be as dust and ashes without someone to inherit it â and of course to Daddy that means a male. He's often said he'd like to adopt you.'
I pricked up my ears.
âYou're joking of course. He hardly notices me.'
âHe notices. If he had his way you would be son and heir.'
I considered this.
âYour daddy's not that rich. It wouldn't be worth my while. I've never really considered him when I've dreamt about being adopted by a filthy-rich man or woman.'
âDaddy is high up in the BBC. The BBC is run by families. Dinnersties they call them: the Magnusens, the Dimblebies, the Michelmores. Being a child of a BBC person is a passport to a good, cushy job, well-paid and
with lots of presteege. And jobs for your kids as well.'
âHe's got you. Why should he need a son?'
âHe's horribly old-fashioned.'
âWell, England has had queens since fifteen fifty-something. You'd think even Uncle Timothy could have got used to the idea by now â¦'
âHe did once condesend to ask me if I wanted to work at the BBC.'
âWhat did you say?'
âI said I wanted to do a degree in the History of Western Art, then go and work in the Queen's Gallery at Buck House.'
âBeats the corridors of the dear old Beeb.'
âIt just occurred to me as he spoke. I'm going to keep all my options open, but those options certainly do not include the Beeb. I said: “Give the job to the newcomer, Daddy. He or she is probably thick as pigshit.”'
âHow interesting. Come on, that's Mum calling for lunch.'
âOh God! Rack of lamb and tiramisu.'
I will slip quickly over what we had for lunch, apart from the lamb and the tiramisu. There was a lot about babies, a lot about the power structures and the behavioural disharmonies (their words) at the BBC, and quite a lot (from my dad, of course) about the creative urge, and how it needed to be stimulated, not crushed. After lunch Dad and Deirdre did the washing up while Tim and Lois talked in the living-room. Tim had a stiff tumbler of white wine concealed between his chair and the wall, and kept taking quick surreptitious gulps. Mum,
for some reason, was asking whether he saw a big change in Dad, whether he looked older and whether the non-stop creativity (he'd had a half-hour play on Armchair Theatre on Radio Four in the last two years) wasn't taking it out of him. When Dad and Deirdre came back in they all four (juniors were not consulted) agreed on a brisk walk up to Trevelyan Cave, and they were just rugging up and putting on walking boots when Deirdre dropped her bombshell.
âOh, I've been meaning to tell you since we arrived, but there hasn't been a convenient opening. In one of Bernard's plays there would have been one, but he just forgot to provide one for real life.'
âDeirdreâ'
âSo I'll just have to tell you at an
un
suitable moment. Bernard and I go back a long time as all of you know, and we have been meeting up again over the last six months. In grubby little hotel bedrooms hired by the hour. We were taking things up where we left them off twelve or thirteen years ago. This' (patting her stomach) âis Bernard's. He'd quite like a daughter in place of that little know-all in short pants he has already. He thinks we are going to get married as soon as the divorce goes through. Think on, Bernard. Marriage has outlived its usefulness. As far as I'm concerned sex is a short-term affair, with plenty of swapping. So it's bye-bye Tim, bye-bye Bernard. And welcome anyone young, fit and into it for the laughs.'