Authors: Jessica Stirling
âYes,' Tom said. âThat would be very nice. Thank you.'
âNo thanks necessary,' Albert said, and like a true gentleman rose to open the door for his wife.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
She lay with her head on a silk pillow, one small fist curled against her cheek. Her hair was spread about her head and babyish perspiration dewed her upper lip. She wore nothing but a shift. Tom could see the outline of her breasts against the cambric, the nipples curiously elongated. She looked, he thought, slightly flushed but not unhealthy. He was embarrassed to be hovering over her while she slept, unaware that she was being observed, but the fact was that he preferred her asleep to wide awake.
The net curtain over the window was too flimsy to filter out the evening light and he could make out Sylvie's clothes folded over a high chair, drawers, stockings, an embroidered garter of which the staff of the Park School would certainly not approve. On the mantel above the fireplace two plaster-cast bookends held a dozen books in line; two little black boys knelt in prayer, foreheads pressed to Latin primers and English grammars as if to acquire knowledge by osmosis. There were no other ornaments in the narrow bedroom, not even functional objects like a mirror or a candlestick and the only furnishings were a dressing-table and a head-high tallboy.
Sylvie sighed, opening one hand and closing it again.
âAw, she's dreaming,' Albert whispered. âSweet dreams, dearest.'
âHave you seen enough, Tom?' Florence murmured from the doorway. âIt's just flushing, quite natural in a girl of her age.'
âYes.' Tom eased himself out of the alcove. He had seen enough, more than enough. It was the first time that he had observed his daughter's slumbers since her infancy, and somehow he wished he hadn't.
âI'll tell her you called, shall I?' said Florence.
âPlease do,' said Tom, and left.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Arthur Franklin had nothing against marriage between cousins. The upper brackets of the shipping industry were full of such unions, encouraged to protect the closed nature of family firms and keep predators firmly beyond the pale. Arthur was willing to concede that Forbes McCulloch would probably wind up as his son-in-law but until that day came he was determined that Forbes would not be given the run of the house.
He entered the hall cautiously, handed hat and overcoat to Eleanor Runciman and peeked at the door that led to the drawing-room.
âIs he still here?'
âNo, sir. He's gone.'
âHe
was
here, though?'
âYes, most of the afternoon and much of the evening.'
âI guessed as much,' Arthur said. âWhen neither Lindsay nor he showed up at Harper's Hill for dinner I thought they'd be here.'
âI provided him with dinner.'
âDid you indeed?'
âI assumed that you had gone back with your brother,' Eleanor said, âand that there would be meat to spare here.'
Arthur hesitated, then, still buoyant with the pleasures of the afternoon, headed for the parlour.
âEleanor, gin or brandy?'
âBrandy, if you please.'
A late evening
tête-à -tête
had become part of the pattern in Brunswick Crescent. Arthur liked to have someone to talk to at the end of the day. Now that Lindsay was growing away from him he depended increasingly upon the housekeeper to provide him with company and, when required, advice. He did not, of course, take advantage of their intimacy and Eleanor was far too respectful to impose upon their close relationship.
âDid you dine with them?' Arthur said.
âOf course.'
âAny plans discussed?'
âWhat sort of plans?'
âMatrimonial plans.'
âNot in front of me,' Eleanor said.
âPappy declares they'll marry before the year's out.'
âDo you have no say in the matter?'
âIt seems not,' Arthur said. âIt seems I'm just expected to conform.'
âYou could surprise them.'
âCould I? How?'
âGive them your blessing.'
Arthur was seated in an armchair, she on the sofa.
He said, âYou rather like the Irish cousin, don't you?'
âI see no harm in him.'
Arthur smiled. âBecause he's a handsome young devil, eh? Does he remind you of that chap from Cork?'
âChap from ⦠Oh!' Eleanor almost blushed. âHow did you hear about the chap from Cork?'
âYou've told the tale to Lindsay so often it would be a miracle if I hadn't heard it. I'm not deaf, you know,' Arthur said. âFiancé, was he?'
âNo, not â not quite, sir.'
âNot good enough for you, eh?'
âRather the other way around, I fear.'
âHow long ago was this near-run thing?'
âYears and years ago. Too many to count.'
âWhy do women have such a soft spot for Irishmen?' Arthur sat back and unloosed his collar and cuff links. Eleanor held his whisky glass while he did so. âI mean, is it the gift of the gab or the brooding looks or the elfin charm? Damned if I can see the attraction.'
âI think' â Eleanor gave him back the glass, fitting it carefully into his outstretched hand â âI honestly think it's the charm.'
âSkin deep.'
âThat's as may be,' Eleanor said. âBetter skin deep than not at all.'
âDon't the Scots have charm?'
âSome do, some don't.'
âAren't I charming enough?'
âAt times, sir, yes â fairly.'
Arthur shook his head ruefully. âDamned with faint praise.'
âIt isn't charm that makes a marriage.'
âReally? What is it then?'
âMutual respect.'
âTry telling that to two young people who fancy themselves in love.'
âI would not dare,' said Eleanor.
She had gauged his mood at last. He wasn't really fretting about Forbes McCulloch. The great lift of voices that had filled St Andrew's Halls that afternoon had lifted his spirits. For a time, she thought, he had soared above pettiness while Donald and he, and two or three hundred other singing souls, had shared in musical communion. She wished sometimes that she had a voice that could soar and that she might share that exquisite pleasure with him.
She said, âIs there no one for you, sir?'
âNo one? What do you mean, Eleanor?'
âI meanâ¦'
Arthur laughed, a little uncomfortably. âAh, so you're still dwelling on the fellow from Cork, are you? Lost opportunities, and all that?'
âI was thinking of your welfare, your happiness.'
âI'm happy enough with things as they stand.'
âAnd after Lindsay goes?'
âShe won't be far away. McCulloch has his workâ¦'
âShe need not go at all,' said Eleanor.
âHmmm?'
âThey could live here with us. With you, I mean.'
âSo,' Arthur said, still not riled. âSo that's what's on my darling daughter's mind, is it? Did she ask you to sound me out?'
âI think it's only a vague suggestion.'
âLindsay's idea, or McCulloch's?'
âIt is a very large house for a single gentleman to occupy,' Eleanor said.
âI might consider moving.'
âDo you wish to move?'
âNo,' Arthur said. âBut I think I'd prefer moving to sharing.'
âIt would be a simple thing to arrange,' Eleanor said. âThe couple could have the entire upper floor and use the drawingroom for their parlour.'
âWhere would you go?'
âI could take the little bedroom on the second floor, next to Nanny.'
âCramped, very cramped,' said Arthur.
Eleanor paused. âNanny may not be with us for much longer.'
Arthur sighed. âThat's true.'
âIt is, of course, only a vague suggestion.'
She watched him swirl whisky in his glass. He put the glass on the carpet at his feet, crossed one knee over the other and tugged at his earlobe.
â
Did
Lindsay put you up to this?' he asked.
âI don't think she's frightfully keen to leave you.'
âLeave me?' Arthur said.
âShe worries about your future.'
âGood God! I'm not in my dotage yet, you know.'
âShe thinks you might be lonely.'
Arthur picked up the glass again. âDid she actually say that?'
âNot in so many words, no.'
âAh, but you know her too well to be fooled, Eleanor.'
âI've known her most of her life,' Eleanor said.
She was hedging his questions skilfully so far and felt rather pleased with her deviousness. The âsuggestion' hadn't come from Lindsay but from young Mr McCulloch who had enlisted her help when Lindsay was out of the room.
âI'm not surprised that McCulloch wants to plunge helter-skelter into matrimony,' Arthur said. âI expect he'll want to take on a house of his own too.'
âI think,' Eleanor said, âthat the young man may be more sensible than you give him credit for, sir.'
âWell, he certainly isn't short of a shilling or two,' Arthur said. âAt least he won't be when he reaches his majority.'
âFloating capital,' Eleanor said, âlooking for a berth?'
âPerhaps I should offer to sell McCulloch this place and look out for something smaller and more suitable to my needs.'
This was precisely what Forbes McCulloch had warned her against.
âI would not be able to accompany you, sir,' Eleanor said.
âWhat? Why ever not?'
âI am unmarried.'
âYou're unmarried now and nobody gives a fig.'
âThere is, or was, a child in the house.'
âAnd that's all that respectability requires, is it?'
âDo you remember the sensation when Mr Fingleton employed a young housekeeper? What talk there was about that?'
âMalicious gossip,' Arthur said. âNobody could ever prove that he was sleeping â that the young woman was anything other than she appeared to be. Besides, Ronald Fingleton was a notorious old rake and she was such a pretty young thing. No, no, no. There's no comparison.'
âEven soâ¦' said Eleanor, and let it hang.
Arthur sighed again and finished his whisky.
He was settled in now and would keep her talking for a good hour or more. She had laid out the hand, had planted the notion that he might lose her as well as his daughter and, with luck and a little manipulation in the course of conversation, she might discover just how much he valued her.
âIf this does come to pass,' Arthur said, âhe'll have to pay his way.'
âFrom what you've told me, sir, that would not be a problem.'
âNo, I don't suppose it would,' Arthur conceded. âIt wouldn't take much to convert this barn into two separate establishments. What's up there? Five apartments?'
âYes, five.'
âI'm not giving up my study.'
âLindsay would not expect you to.'
âYou
have
discussed this with her, haven't you, Eleanor?'
âIn a general way, sir, yes.'
âWell, if McCulloch does move into my house after marriage there's one thing I would insist upon.'
âNo dogs?' said Eleanor.
âNo mother-in-law,' said Arthur.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Lindsay had never known what it was like to be other than prosperous. She accepted her position in society with the equanimity that is the birthright of all middle-class children. Money, like time, had had no real significance for her.
âLive here?' she said. âPapa would never stand for it.'
âFor a time, a year or two, while Forbes â your husband â establishes himself,' Miss Runciman said. âDid I not hear you discuss some such thing with him yesterday afternoon?'
âDid you? No, I think you're mistaken,' Lindsay said hesitantly.
âAh, in that caseâ¦'
âWell, perhaps we did,' said Lindsay, frowning.
She had been half asleep yesterday, particularly in the hour before dinner. She was under the impression that Forbes had been going on about the state of the war, particularly de Wet's invasion of Cape Colony, details of which had just appeared in
The Times.
She had her own views about the war in South Africa but she did not have the temerity to argue her case with Forbes. Something less distant might have been said in the course of the evening, however. She tried to recapture the ebb and flow of the conversations that had marked out the dreary Sunday: some talk of money, much talk of marriage, a brief interlude of kissing â then what? She could not for the life of her recall.
âI rather received the impression that you and Forbes were in agreement,' Eleanor Runciman said.
âAbout what?'
âMarrying and coming to live here.'
âOh, did he say that? I mean, did I agree?'
âI seem to remember,' Eleanor went on, casually rather than cautiously, âthat when Forbes said it might be an acceptable means of persuading your father that you aren't too young to marryâ¦'
âYes?'
âYou agreed with him.'
âIn that case,' said Lindsay, âI suppose I must have. Now, if you'll excuse me, I really must dash. I'm meeting Aunt Lilias in town at noon.'
âShopping?'
âLunching. Uncle Donald's off somewhere working on a tender and my aunt's feeling a little bit out in the cold.'
âPoor soul,' Miss Runciman said tactfully, and tactfully said no more.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
âAre you rich?' Sylvie asked.
âWhat makes you think that?'
âBecause you bring me here.'
Forbes looked round. It hadn't occurred to him that the lounge of the Imperial Hotel in North Street was a particular haunt of the wealthy.
âI bring you here because it's convenient,' Forbes said.