Authors: Malcolm MacDonald
âSchtumm!' he warned. âThat's Hugh Wellington â my boss.'
âOh! Poor
you
!'
âDylan Thomas says the man speaks as if he had the Elgin Marbles in his mouth. He says it's the standard
BBC
accent.'
âYou know Dylan Thomas?' Isabella said, taking a step back and looking him up and down.
âI run across him now and then at Mother Redcaps in Camden Town. He does poetry, they say.'
âVery good poetry, too.'
âIf he writes as well as he puts away a pint . . . I can believe it.'
They drifted off toward the Palmers' lawn and the two buffets. âIs it too early to light the boiler?' she asked.
âGive it another half hour,' he advised.
Todd Ferguson explained to a woman from Adam and Tony's office that they ought to light a fire under their union organizer. The nationalization of the railways was going to double the wages of all its workers . . . or
someone
was going to get lynched. âThey can afford it now they're not paying dividends to all those idle-rich shareholders,' he explained.
Faith â who overheard him in passing and who also knew that her parents held shares in several British railway companies and were looking forward immensely to being bought out by the Labour government, since none of them had paid a dividend since 1923 â almost stopped to enlighten him. But her mission â hers and Angela's â was too important for that.
âHer real name was Angela Wirth,' Felix told Marianne, up in her kitchen. âI kick myself now that it never crossed my mind. When she told me about “Maria”, she imitated the way you speak German perfectly.'
Marianne stood well back from the window, at the farthest point from which she could still see Faith talking with Willard â and Angela sitting at a table a little way off. âIt is she,' she murmured. âHardly has she changed. Yet never for one moment I imagined she should have lived.' She closed her eyes tight. âListen to my English! I believe I dream only. She won't say anything to Willard?'
âThat's the one thing you can be quite sure of. Nor will Faith. The problem is Nicole.'
âNicole?' Marianne was aghast. âBut she must never know. Never.'
âIt's not fair to leave her in ignorance.'
âNo!' She gripped his arm and shook it. âNo! Please â never! Never must that one know. She is too . . . feeling?'
âEmotional. But the way she treats you . . .'
âThat plays no part. I don't mind. I admire her indeed. For what she believes, she is perfectly right. Please, now â no one must ever tell her. Not you. Not . . . Fräulein Wirth . . .'
âAngela Worth. She's made it English.'
âNot her. And absolutely not Faith. You must make them to swear it.'
âAngela's worried . . .'
âPromise you make them swear it!'
âOK. Angela's worried about the transcript she gave you. The one ofâ'
âI know the one. I never read it all through â just enough to make me spew.'
âYou have it still?'
âI know where it is â or should be.'
âAnd?'
âI gave it to . . . well, it ended up with a comrade. In Hamburg. He was still living there when I left. But he has it. He works in the docks. Never I thought she'd come back for it.'
âUnless he's handed it over to the Russians.'
âI don't think so. He was quite . . . what's the word? Like out-of-love?'
âDisillusioned â with the communists?'
She nodded. âSame with me. With the
Soviet-style
communism. Disillusioned.' She tucked the word away.
âAnd can't you just explain all that to Willard?'
She stared at him a long moment and said, âI want a father to my baby. Not a memory. Those things Nicole says . . . the things she does . . . I hardly notice them by now.'
âSo?' Felix shrugged helplessly. âWe have no right to tell you what to do. But can I suggest this â I'll go down now and explain your wishes to Angelaâ'
Marianne interrupted, âShe's not your girlfriend now? Faith's not moving out?'
âWhy?' He was taken aback. âWhat have you heard?'
âNothing!' Marianne assured him â a little too earnestly, he thought.
âOK. As I say â I'll explain your wishes to Angela and you'll recover from your “migraine” in about ten minutes from now . . . or discover it was just a passing headache or something. And then you'll come back downstairs. And meanwhile, Angela will say confidentially to Willard something like “Did your wife ever work in an office in Berlin . . . in a very important office . . . an architectural design office . . . ?” Sort of edging toward the question rather than coming straight out with it. And at some stage Willard will ask why all the probing. And Angela will explain that she was a technician in Goebbels's documentary-film department and they once did an interview with Speer in his office . . . and there was this ravishingly beautiful Danish girl . . . And Willard will say, “Swedish!” and then all is explained â including your “migraine”.'
âHow does that help?'
âWell, I would think the last thing you'd want would be some ex-employee of Goebbels turning up today and recognizing you â not with Nicole standing just three or four yards away.'
Marianne stared at him, slack-jawed. âI can imagine how you survived,' she said. âBut can Angela can carry it off? Carry it off â that's right?'
âA simple deception like this?' He smiled condescendingly. âNever wonder if any survivor of the
KLS
can carry off a deception.'
âOh no!' Sally had her eyes on a battered pre-war Austin Ten that had reached the start of the lime-tree avenue and come to a halt. âI think that's Terence Lanyon's car.'
âDid he say they were moving in today?' Tony asked.
âNo â definitely not until next week. The thing is, I don't have the gatelodge key. Have you seen Bob Ambrose? I gave it to him to clean out that old wasps' nest.' She ran out into the drive and waved for Terence to come on up to the house.
âA garden party!' he exclaimed as he got out of the car and half-lifted half-slammed the door shut. âWe
are
going up in the world.'
âNo Hilary?' Tony asked, joining them.
âShe's still packing up in Manchester. I'm on my way back so I thought I'd cry in in the passing.'
âOn your way back from the
LSE
?'
âNo. The Fabian Society have asked me to chair a symposium on welfare economics. Who's here?' All the while he spoke his eyes quartered the crowd.
Tony was reminded at once of Willard, who had the same habit. âHave you eaten?' he asked. âYou should come and try some of Nicole's offerings before they're all gone.'
When Sally told him how many useful people were at the party he said, âI think I'll stay the night â if someone can kindly put me up?'
âSo let me get this straight,' Bob said. âYou've got to move a hundred-thousand people out of London â the ones Hitler never shifted â and you're going to build copies of Welwyn Garden City sort-of dotted all around London, and in-between it's all kept green and no one's allowed to build nothing. Strewth!'
Sir Patrick chuckled despite himself â for the last thing he wanted to talk about today was
The Abercrombie Plan for Greater London
, which had consumed his life for the past decade. âI wish, young man, that you could teach our politicians and civil servants to put things as concisely and as accurately as you. The only item you missed is our plan for the roads. We shall build a ring of roads around London, roads for motor vehicles
only
. All the other roads will either go over them or under them. So all traffic in London will be local traffic. All the rest will whizz around the outside on great highways that carry no local traffic whatever.' His smile and his beetling brows invoiced a bright-bright future to Bob and his generation. âAnd now â if you'll excuse me â I see a gentleman I very much wish to buttonhole.'
âNutty as a fruitcake!' Bob said admiringly after he'd gone. âBut you gotta hand it to him for conviction. You can't deny that.'
âIt's more sinister than that, matey,' Eric said. âDid you hear the language?
We
will move
them
 . . .
We
will give
them
houses, streets, parks to be proud of . . .
We
will give
them
light and air and sunshine . . .'
âWhat's wrong with that?'
âI wouldn't have minded just
one
sentence beginning with
they
â as in “They may choose . . .”'
âFogel is talking to Sir Patrick Abercrombie,' Faith said to Felix as he rejoined them. âI'd better go and see if he wants me there.'
He caught her arm. âJust before you go. I've spoken with Marianne and she is absolutely, utterly determined that Nicole must
not
be told.' Faith opened her mouth to object but he went on. âI agree with you. It's wrong to let Nicole carry on the way she does. But today is not the day. We'll have to work on it.'
She looked as if she would still argue her point, but the urge to join Fogel was stronger.
Still Felix held her back. âYou should also hear this.' He turned to Angela. âMarianne and I think that you should go to Willard and tell him how you were a recordist with a Propaganda Ministry film crew that visited Speer's office. Tell him how Marianne stood out . . . the only woman on the top floor â and so beautiful â so, of course, you remembered her. And say she was Danish. Not Swedish. Let
him
make the connection. He'll understand that the last thing she wanted was for someone with that sort of memory turning up and blurting it all out. Especially with Nicole so close. You can do this?'
Angela nodded. âDid she say anything about the transcript?'
Faith escaped and went in search of Fogel.
âAs far as she knows, it's safe. She left it with a fellow communist in Hamburg. It's best if you go and beard Willard in his den by yourself.
Danish
, remember. It'll stop him thinking your association was anything more than that one day. I'm going to find Arthur and help him light the boiler.'
âBeard? Den?' Angela muttered as she walked away.
Fogel didn't notice Faith until she was a mere twenty paces away; then he gave her a surreptitious
not-yet
sort of sign. She paused, marooned in mid-lawn, and, to her dismay, found herself being approached by Hugh Wellington. âMiss Bullen-ffitch!' he called out. âI knew I had seen you somewhere before. Do please forgive me for not recognizing you at once. You used to ride in Hyde Park, I think?'
She could not place him in that context. âYou rode, too?' she asked.
âMe? No! I couldn't afford that. No, I go for a bit of a jogtrot round the Serpentine every morning before brekker, don't you know. But I used to see you in Rotten Row on a magnificent chestnut.'
âHe's here now â loose in the field beside the drive.'
âWell, I'm glad I wasn't mistaken. But what I really wished to talk to you about was Mister Breit. I gather from Mister Fogel that you're the one who recruited him for this arts encyclopedia?'
âYes, I suppose I was.'
âJust so. Just so. And that is why I'd welcome your advice, dear young lady. I think that a sculpture by him would also add lustre â as you put it â to our new quarters at Alexandra Palace. In the reception area. Not outside. It's not the most salubrious part of London. And we'd want to take it with us if we ever moved to a more central location.' He eyed her diffidently. âCould you . . . sort of . . . sound out the ground and â if favourable â introduce me sometime this evening?'
He held his breath and only let it out when she replied, âYou'll need to talk first to
me
about that, Mister Wellington. I'm now his agent, you see.'
And why not? she thought. God knows he needs one.
âOne great thing about the war,' Bob Ambrose said to Mrs Tawney, âwas that all the voluntary work â you know â like running canteens for bombed-out folk and the tea-and-a-wad service for the armed forces at the railway stations â things like that â it was all done by ordinary people . . . women in the
WVS
.'
â
I
was in the
WVS
,' Mrs Tawney complained.
âYeah â that's what I'm on about. It brought you down to the level of being ordinary â like the rest of us. You and Lady Hunter. And very good at it you was, too, if you don't mind me saying so. I take me hat off to you and her 'cos it can't have been easy.'
Mrs Tawney was desperate to have three rotten windows at the back of Monkswood â her ancestral home â replaced; and this awful common little man seemed to have the knack of getting building materials when no one else for miles around could manage it. What made it so galling was that her family had employed the Ambroses for generations.
âI wouldn't exactly call it difficult,' she said. She longed to add, âAfter all,
my
ancestors have carried nourishing broth and uplifting pamphlets to
your
hard-up ancestors since time immemorial.'
âNo! You shouldn't run yourself down, Mrs Tawney â making out like it was nothing. In the war, you come down toward our level and we come up toward yours â and we was all British and proud of it together. And we can't go back now. That's all gone forever. And I'll tell you anuvver thing, I pity all these Europeans â and the Yanks â 'cos it never happened to them. Look at all these foreigners here today â they live among us and, fair's fair, they pull their weight. And they'll all get British passports, too, I shouldn't wonder. But they'll never really understand us like what you and me understand one another. And isn't that the truth.'