Read The Image in the Water Online
Authors: Douglas Hurd
âHow's the campaign?' The words came from a dry mouth through cracked lips.
David, moving newspapers from a cane chair, sat down and told her. The sluggishness of Makewell and Central Office, the lamentable inactivity of Roger Courtauld and all other party chieftains except himself, their continuing failure to narrow Labour's lead in the polls, the neglect of the two issues that could really stir the English electorate, namely the interfering Europeans and the grasping Scots, the birth of his New England Movement. He could see her face and neck strain as she exerted herself to follow what he said.
There was silence when he finished, punctuated by the measured note of the drip.
David Alcester was suddenly impatient with Joan's passivity. Her natural energy was being destroyed by the futility of this darkened room. He rose abruptly to open the half-closed curtains and let in some winter light. The cord snagged in his hand; the curtain moved an inch, then stuck.
âLeave it,' Joan said, with strain in her voice.
He sat down again, and forced himself back into courtesy. âSorry to hear about Guy.'
âYes,' she said. âHe will be all right.'
David recalled the moments over the last five years when he had judged that he could take Guy's place. He had listed one or two incidents in his memory, knowing that each was trivial, even silly, in case they might one day be turned to good effect. He did not find Joan sexually attractive but would have slept with her had it been necessary. Somehow the moment had never come for a political takeover of Joan Freetown in the interests of his career. Guy occupied a compartment of her life into which she invited no other and which she was not prepared to discuss with him.
David gazed at the fox-hunting prints, bizarre and tasteless against a chintzy wall Red paper peonies glared at him from an alcove opposite Joan's bed. Dozens of get-well cards were pinned to a green felt noticeboard around the fire safety instructions. Nurse Wendy came in with a large cardboard menu and invited Joan to choose her lunch.
His frustration returned and he got up to go. He believed that he would never see Joan Freetown again. He had not wanted a sentimental farewell, which would have been out of character for both of them. He had hoped, he now realised, for one last great rumbustious political discussion. She should have torn into his description of the lacklustre election campaign, attacked the faint-hearts, told him to pull himself together, and generally been her bossy, intolerable, irresistible self. But he had come too late. She was drifting back, perhaps, into older memories of Guy and the Cotswold farmhouse, then forward into death and whatever happened next.
âMy meeting is in Edinburgh at five,' he said. âGoodbye, Joan.'
Again she stretched out a skeletal arm on top of the
blankets. He came to the bed, crackling the absurd apron, lifted the hand and kissed it, as she in turn said, âGoodbye,' and then, without explanation, âSorry.'
He left the room without a word of thanks to Nurse Wendy, tore off the apron and threw it on to a chair in the lounge. David Alcester had strong self-control. He had not wept for thirty years. The indoor walk back to the main door was just long enough for him to dominate the sharp stabs of sadness and frustration. But he never forgot them.
âHow was she?' asked Clive, back in the car.
âPretty good. She sent her regards.'
They drove to Heathrow in silence.
âIS THIS THE DULLEST ELECTION CAMPAIGN ON RECORD?'
By Alice Thomson
As we approach the last weekend of the election campaign the loudest noise to be heard is the light snoring of the electorate. The two elderly party leaders tiptoe up and down the kingdom as if anxious not to wake anyone. If you listen carefully you can just catch the impression that the Leader of the Opposition might tinker with the tax system â of course, in a way from which everyone would benefit. He might be a little more co-operative with our European partners while, of course, preserving the British veto on everything that matters. He might be a little frosty with the right-wing governments in Poland and Austria, but would maintain our traditional friendship with both peoples. He might increase the fines on farmers who grow GM crops or clone farm animals without bureaucratic authorisation while, of course, encouraging the
scientific community to press on with yet further experiments on both subjects. All this from a man who has been trying to be Prime Minister for fifteen years. If he asks the bookmakers he will hear that the job will be his in a week's time. Will John Turnbull have the will to grasp the prize?
Not that much grasping will be needed. The Prime Minister, Peter Makewell, goes through the motions of modern campaigning. His website is crowded, there is no pause between his e-mail shots, his computers conduct their telephone canvass with silken efficiency. Once upon a time there was a man behind all this apparatus, a steady Scottish laird, who became the natural choice for moderate Tories when Roger Courtauld stumbled over that beach towel. Not that Peter Makewell has been a bad prime minister â the way in which he had clamped down the Tory fury against the press two years ago had been masterly. But he must be the only holder of the office less well known at the end of his term (we must surely be there now) than at the beginning.
Only one leading politician is giving the election campaign a taste of the noise and colour that used to be traditional. David Alcester is not a nice man, but he has chosen a style of politics in which niceness is unimportant. To an amazing extent he has managed to detach himself from the record of the government, of which he is a senior member. No one asks David Alcester about the rather dull Budget he produced soon after taking over from Joan Freetown. No one asks him how he would pay for the manifesto commitment to
abolish capital-gains tax in the life of the next Parliament. Perhaps this is because no one expects the Tories to win again. But there is no doubt that David Alcester, a modern politician, using the old-fashioned techniques of public meeting and radio broadcast, has seized the initiative on his two brutal issues, Europe and the Scots. His New England Movement is still in its early days, but its slashing attacks on both targets are already scoring hits. There is a difference between the two. Europe is an old target full of holes, punctured by generations of critics having their fun. The European Union will never be popular, but everyone knows that nothing much will change. The fear of a superstate has gone, as one dreary meeting of ministers follows another. No party is going to disrupt the economy by rerunning the referendum on the euro. That reluctant and honourable change of tack has gone into political history alongside Peel's repeal of the Corn Laws. We are left with a large, awkward, often quarrelsome union of states, vaguely right-minded in big matters and bureaucratic in small, easy to criticise, hard to reform and impossible to abandon.
David Alcester understands this well. That is why he reserves his sharpest barbs and subtlest tactics for the Scots. The issue has been brewing since the Scots achieved their Parliament in 1999. David Alcester has brought it to the boil. While claiming to be a Unionist he and his New England Movement are in effect inciting the English against the Union. His speech last night in Leith Town Hall foreshadowed a tough assault on Scotland's fiscal arrangements and on the number of
Scots MPs at Westminster. I understand that he went well beyond anything approved by the Prime Minister at the Manifesto Committee of the Cabinet. He aims to make the Scots more unpopular in England than they have been since the days of Lord Bute and Dr Johnson. He means to ride this wave into the next Parliament, with what result neither he nor anyone else can predict.
I have found in recent days that everyone is talking about David Alcester. Few people like him; even fewer despise him. This is not a bad foundation for political advancement. So, as the election campaign drones to its close, watch this space.
âThat's generous of you. I talked to Louise about it in case you made the offer. Yes, we would like to spend the weekend at Chequers, to pack up our things and say goodbye to the staff. You'll find them excellent.'
âStay a week, if you like. Or two. Florence is not exactly used to country life. It'll take her a bit of time to realise the pleasure of it. She's in no hurry.'
âShe'll love Chequers, I'm sure.'
The telephone crackled. Neither man was quite sure if any of their staff were listening in. There was a pause. Then the next Prime Minister said rather awkwardly to the present Prime Minister, âDo I wait for the Palace to ring? Sorry to ask you, but no one at Millbank has the faintest idea. It's so long since we were in power.'
âDon't worry. I'll go out into Downing Street now, and concede. The Queen will drive up from Windsor, send for me, send for you. You don't actually have to kiss hands. You'll be installed at No. 10 here by teatime. The staff will line up in
the entrance, and clap you warmly as you come in. Don't take that too seriously. It's a tradition, they do it for everyone. Louise will make sure there's something up here in the flat for you to eat.'
âThanks. That's very kind.' Another pause. The two men had known each other for a quarter of a century, but always in a political context. It seemed natural to revert to this. Turnbull, as the winner, led the way. âIt all went pretty much as expected, I think. You got a dozen more seats than we forecast, but no harm in that. If he'd lived Simon Russell would have done no better for the Tories, maybe worse. I just wanted to say that to you. The country wanted a change.'
âI agree about the dozen seats. Carlisle, for example. Berwick-on-Tweed from the Liberal Democrats. We did relatively well in the North. Why was that, do you think?'
âNo mystery. Alcester stirred them up with all that nonsense against the Scots. That's my only complaint about the campaign. You should have reined him in.'
âNot possible.'
âNow he'll be pain and grief to both of us. I know he's your son-in-law, but â¦'
âNot quite.' Peter Makewell had a thought. âI haven't checked â does it look as if you'll depend on Scottish Labour votes for your majority?'
âYes, thanks to these dozen extra seats of yours.'
âPity.' He did not need to spell out the trouble ahead.
âCan you keep that lad out of the way? Shadow Foreign Secretary would do. On home matters he's a pain in the arse.'
âYou're assuming I'm going to keep the leadership of the Party.'
âYou've done better than expected. No one will challenge you.'
âExcept myself. Aided and abetted by my wife.' Another pause. Then the conversation changed from polite exchange to hard business.
âAre you seriously considering standing down?'
âI am.'
âAll I can say is it's your duty to carry on and keep your Party in shape.'
âThat's balls.”
Turnbull was by nature phlegmatic. A generation earlier he would have smoked a pipe. But every now and then a more forceful character broke out.
He spoke firmly. âBeing Leader of the Opposition is the worst job in politics. I'm bloody glad to be shot of it. You'll have that job by teatime and you can't run away. It's public service, and you know it.'
âPublic service, indeed. You're an old-fashioned Tory at heart. I always guessed it.' But Peter Makewell, uneasy in his own mind, was not prepared to argue the point further. âAnyway, congratulations again. You must get on with your Cabinet-making.'
âAnd a right shower they are, when you see the names on paper. Who's to be Chancellor of the Exchequer? Never a one of them can count.'
Peter Makewell knew that Turnbull would have prepared the Cabinet list in his own mind months ago. But both men ended the conversation liking the other the better for it.
Tynemouth flickered on to the screen: a big increase in the Conservative majority, a beaming middle-aged woman with a
blue rosette and ample display of teeth. âA high turnout compared to others, and another northern result against the Labour trend,' shouted the commentator. He shouted because he thought this was the best way to hold the election-night audience after a campaign which, everyone said, had been the dullest in history.
âSilly woman, fabulous result,' said David Alcester.
They had returned from his own count in Newbury Corn Exchange to the tiny cottage which they rented just north of the bypass.
âShe's done better than you,' said Julia. David's majority had been quite sharply reduced.
âYou don't understand anything.' The tiny bedroom under the eaves had been chilly when they reached it an hour earlier. David had turned on both bars of an old electric fire. Now he sprawled in the only armchair, wearing only the old yellow wool dressing-gown that he kept at the cottage. Julia, still in her constituency tweed suit, lay on her side of the double bed. Watching David follow the election results was like watching him make love to a mistress. Julia was amazed to remember that, not long ago, as a Conservative prime minister's radical daughter, she too had been interested in politics.
She listened without understanding to David's exposition of his own cleverness in raising the cry against the Scots. It had played well in the north. It would play well everywhere, even in Newbury, now that the electorate had landed itself with a Labour government dependent on the votes of Scottish MPs at Westminster.
âYou'll see tomorrow,' he ended.
âWhat's happening tomorrow?'
âI told you. Rally of our supporters in the Market Square. I
thank them for their efforts.' He paused. âThere'll be a few people from outside, I expect.' He smiled to himself. âJust to make the point.'
What point? Julia did not care. Since their row on the day of his Leith speech they had hardly communicated. He had stayed away, returned to London. They had come down to the count in Newbury, without either fresh quarrel or reconciliation. She found this intolerable.