The Twyborn Affair (11 page)

Read The Twyborn Affair Online

Authors: Patrick White

Oh dear, is it ever possible to make it up for anybody else when one almost never succeeds in deciding for oneself? Mrs Golson resolved to try.

It was her turn to rummage in her bag (Curly's anniversary present) to take out the shagreen engagement book, extract the slim gilt pencil, scribble on a page, and call the waiter.

Madame Vatatzes seemed hardly aware until the music broke in on her; then she roused herself. ‘This awful thing! Why did you do it?'

‘I did it because the day you hurt your ankle it was what they were playing, when I led you in from the street.'

‘But so horribly sticky!' Madame Vatatzes was visibly suffering.

While Joanie Golson had crimped her face, clenched her hand, not so much the wicked schoolgirl as the naughty child clutching her forbidden jujube.

‘Won't you let me enjoy it?' she implored this stern older girl.

‘I can't think why anyone should want to.'

Immediately after, Madame Vatatzes gathered up her smoking tackle and shoved it in the velvet reticule.

‘Why I came here this afternoon,' her head was still bent above her operations, ‘was because Angelos suggested it. He would like to meet you—Mr Golson too, of course. Thursday—would it be possible? To a glass of something—say five-thirty. At “Crimson Cottage”.' She pronounced it as Miss Clitheroe had, and as Madame Llewellyn-Boieldieu would have.

Poor Joanie was thoroughly flabbergasted: the letter, the formal call, the invitation, all as she had dreamed, and rejected as too symmetrical to expect. Today she suspected that fate
is
symmetrical.

‘Oh,' she gasped, ‘I'll have to ask Mr Golson—my husband
—Curly …
Did you say Thursday? I'm almost sure we have nothing on Thursday.' Knowing there wasn't, she did not even bother to look in her book; in any case her hands would have been too helpless.

‘I've never gathered,' she gasped, no, her corset wheezed, ‘your husband's profession—that is,' she said, ‘if he had one before he retired.'

‘Spices,' Madame Vatatzes seemed to gnash her strong white teeth; it could have been provoked by the Meditation from
Thais
. ‘He exported spices, from Smyrna, from Alexandria. Not all that successfully,' she added. ‘As heir to the Imperial throne he considered himself above commerce. A Byzantine by birth, he's a Byzantinologist by vocation, and an authority on Orthodox theology, which he admits he doesn't yet understand.' She rose, tall and cool, reeking of her cheap French cigarette. ‘His true hobby, I sometimes think, is entomology.'

Still cowering on her gilt chair, Mrs Golson quailed before these biographical details she had been rash enough to encourage. Until her friend's smile and extended hand dissolved the terror in her bones, and she sprang up, or that is how it might have been, had her forms been less globular. Now she wobbled on reaching the erect
position, but did not fall, thanks to Madame Vatatzes' firm hand, and even more, the protracted smile.

What could one give in return? In her room Mrs Golson had an unopened box of Turkish delight. Too far up, and besides, she was always fobbing people off with presents instead of confronting them.

In the glass panels she saw her own face perspiring mercilessly through its powder and the ritual dash of rouge, while Madame Vatatzes walked, cool, erect, timeless, through the barrage of music, the cigarette smoke, and interrogation by veiled eyes.

When they had reached the dusty hall, calm except for the action of a furtive heart, Mrs Golson asked, ‘That evening when I passed by your villa and heard you playing—the two of you—what was it, I wonder?' Mrs Golson did not even pause to wonder at her own courage; on Madame Vatatzes' arm, her question seemed natural, logical, as gilt-edged as a love she had always hoped for.

‘Oh, I don't know—it could have been—yes, I think it probably was—we had all three, after coalescing, begun to emerge—to
surge
. Yes, on that evening I think it was probably Chabrier.'

Mrs Golson, who had never heard of the fellow, was relieved her friend had not seemed to find her presumptuous. She was so grateful for
everything
that she lunged forward to set the revolving door in motion for the departing guest.

Ejected by it after a brief but delirious twirl, Mrs Golson leaned forward on her cramped toes, peering at a halcyon sky as though expecting at least a cyclone. ‘My dear, I quite forgot,' she remembered, ‘couldn't I have our man run you home?'

Madame Vatatzes lashed out with her head, perhaps not yet recovered from the revolving door and already part of Mrs Golson's non-existent cyclone. ‘I shall walk,' she said, ‘so good for one—and be back in no time.'

 

What would have become of him all these weeks without the personal objects surrounding him, the appurtenances of a stable life? Whether in London, Inverness (most of all perhaps Inverness; you can feel most foreign where you think you understand the language
and don't) or Paris, or here at this damn St Mayeul where they were stuck for one of Joanie's less explicable whims, he derived significant support from his hairbrushes alone, the concave ivory with gold monograms (time the bristles were renewed, time they were washed if Joanie would get down to it, you tried picking out the fluff yourself with a pin) less from the clothes-brush and softer-bristled narrow one for hats, the stud-box, and bottle for hair tonic, a slit in the leather casing to show you the level of the stuff inside. All these
things
: Curly Golson sometimes wondered how they had acquired him. Joanie perhaps: ‘Oh, but darling, you ought to
have
one …' So they became necessary, his various appurtenances, like the yacht at Rose Bay, the horses in training at Kensington, the bottle-green Austin with brass fittings, even Joanie Sewell, comfortable in her own right. Whether he had acquired Joanie or she him, he had never decided. She was a good investment and luscious piece of flesh (no one would have dragged it out of him.)

Dressing this afternoon she had finished before him for the first time in history. She was in the other room doing God knew what, not putting in time, she never put in time, but whipped it up to what she hoped was the level of her expectations. Which she never reached, while achieving all else, all the solid things in life. Himself for instance: Golsons' Emporium, on top of Sewell's Sweat-free Felt.

Along the coast it was an evening of sun after a day of brooding. Clear blue, but brisk. Curly Golson was standing at the bedroom window of his suite at the Grand Hôtel Splendide. In the gardens below and down the Avenue Félix Faure the palms rose slashed and bashed without appearing more tattered than was natural to them. A scent of unidentifiable flowers (he accepted, but did not care for flowers) and horse manure, and France, drifted up as far as his nostrils.

Duty returned him to the dressing-table and he made a pass or two with the brushes at what remained of his hair, reviving it with a slight dash of bay rum and cantharides from the leather-cased travelling-bottle. He got himself into that rather natty sage waist
coat he had picked up in the Burlington Arcade, over it the Harris jacket (it was cold enough for that.) The glass told him he was a fine figure of an antipodean gentleman.

Yet on returning to the open window he found his self-assurance sinking. He could not have accounted for it, or not immediately. The same anonymous bourgeois figures were advancing towards and retreating from him between the formal avenue's tattered palms, when suddenly he was overwhelmed by his own anonymity, which did not protect him from a suspicion that the world of menace held him in its sights. He tried creeping out of range, away from the open window at least. Must be this war, which you could otherwise avoid by not understanding the French papers and resisting your inclination to go in search of
The Times
.

There remained the rumours. These were what the open window framed, embodied in the anonymous faces of the French figures dressed in black, traipsing for no revealed purpose up and down the Avenue Félix Faure. Curly Golson hadn't had it so bad since Inverness, though that was different, like contributing a detail to some old, time-darkened painting, harmless enough in theme, but lethal as dreams can be, with their load of buried personal threats; whereas the threat lurking beyond the window at St Mayeul was of a more general nature, at the same time one from which the sleeper's will might not succeed in waking him. He had not experienced anything like this before. He might have discussed it with Joanie to ease his spirit, if he had been able to express himself, but hadn't been born what they call ‘clever'.

Joanie called from the
salon
next door, ‘What are you doing, darling? I've been wondering whether we ought to take a present.'

‘Hadn't thought about it. Could take along a case of champagne.'

‘Heavens, no!' She was shocked to visualise Teakle lugging the case in their wake, through the overgrown garden, towards the dilapidated villa.

Curly had come out from the bedroom, and in spite of his tastelessness she was glad to see him, in his Harris tweed, exuding the scent of bay rum, so far removed from what Madame Vatatzes had
referred to as ‘the smell of a man'. Mrs Golson sat smiling up at him from the Louis
bergère
, almost worshipful had he noticed.

But today Curly seemed moody and preoccupied. ‘What about pushing off?' he asked, as though she had kept him waiting, and not the other way round.

Dear Curly, so reliable! When not submitted to the heavy demands of sexuality, in the context of what she understood as marriage, part duty, part economic, Joan Golson loved her husband.

‘That's a stunner of a waistcoat, darling!'

But he did not seem to hear her remark. She ought to seduce him more often with little soothing compliments. Titillated by a thought, not quite innocent, and not quite reprehensible, she got up meekly enough and followed his broad tweedy back. Her mood of the moment was what she recognised as fragile. She might brush against him on entering the lift and they would enjoy a delicious reunion of loyalties under the hunchback's malicious gaze.

It didn't work out quite like that. Curly's blenching finger pressed on the button repeatedly. ‘… out of order … antiquated …' The voice made husky by alcohol and smoke vibrated in her.

‘Oh, darling, but how maddening!' she protested. ‘It's that man—the hunchback. He goes across and talks to the porter. I've caught him at it.'

It occurred to neither of them to take the stairs. Hadn't they paid for the lift?

So Curly's finger went on blenching as he pressed the button. Why was she so impressed by it? Far back, as a little girl, she remembered somebody showing her a witchety grub. But that was soft. As was she. Even so, she had squashed the grub. And had a bad dream about it. Oh dear, the liftman was to blame
—Ange
, no other—when they were expected at the Vatatzes'.

Suddenly the door of the cage opened to receive the Golsons. Ange was too detached to appear in any way censorious as he hung on the rope by which he functioned. The Golsons were standing at attention, at what might have been the prescribed distance from a liftman. Curly's calves looked as substantial as one would have ex
pected in a male figure of the better class, but Joan's Papillon by Worth faintly shimmered and fluttered in the draught which entered from the lift-well.

They reached the
rez-de-chaussée
with such a bump that her hands grew hot inside her gloves and she clutched her bag as though she half expected a thief to snatch it. Inside the bag was the present she had hesitated to declare after squashing Curly's suggestion of champagne. It was an antique amethyst brooch, framed, not in diamonds, but a garland of inoffensive brilliants: a charming little piece of jewellery, not made less so by the fact that Mrs Golson did not want it.

Then that bump. The hunchback's hump.
Ange!

But hadn't they arrived safely? The door of the gilt cage opened. Curly Golson was getting out.

When Joanie told him, ‘Darling—I'm going up—back—only for a second. Wait for me in the lounge, won't you?'

Halfway there, he could hardly have done otherwise.

Not only did Ange despise, he must have loathed her while hauling her back to the second floor. He could not understand that so much, almost her continued existence, depended on it.

‘
Merci
,' she said. ‘
Vous êtes très gentil
.'

What she could not have understood was that Ange despised her more for addressing him as no guest ever had at the Grand Hôtel Splendide des Ligures.

When Mrs Golson reappeared in the lounge she was wearing her tan Melton suit in place of the Worth Papillon. ‘Now,' she enquired cajolingly, ‘are we ready?'

They went out to where Teakle was waiting to open the Austin's doors.

She realised at once that she must look heavy, dull (perhaps she was) in her tan Melton. The hat sat too close to her heavy brows. She glanced about her nervously, licking her lips, adjusting the veil which bound the straight-brimmed hat to her head and made the whole effect more uncompromising.

Curly was in the driver's seat.

‘Oh, do be careful, darling, won't you?'

Did Teakle's steadfast neck despise her as deeply as Ange the hunchback's eyes?

Curly did not answer, and they started off. She rather enjoyed being terrified in their own motor, her husband at the wheel. Lulled by her terrors, she sank back into an upholstered corner, clutching her bag with the amethyst brooch which she might, she hoped, find the courage to offer Madame Vatatzes; it would suit her style perfectly.

As they swept through the grove of under-nourished pines, the stench from the salt-pans prevented Mrs Golson's hopes aspiring much beyond the hatching of sooty needles, through which were revealed those other glimpses of enamelled gold and halcyon.

Other books

Braking Points by Tammy Kaehler
Blood Fire by Sharon Page
Lessons for Laura by Savage, Mia
The Red Storm by Grant Bywaters
Whispers in the Dawn by Aurora Rose Lynn
A Paris Apartment by Michelle Gable
The Silver Arrow by Larry Itejere
Death at the Summit by Nikki Haverstock
The Storm Murders by John Farrow