Read A Period of Adjustment Online
Authors: Dirk Bogarde
âHere's the key to Jericho. Want it? Take charge of it for me? It might just get pinched in Nice ⦠in the
parking
or wherever. Lots of villains there. Mafia. Don't want to risk that, do we?'
He straightened up, then a very small smile broke at the corners of his mouth. He took the key and held it in his fist.
âI'm only ten, on the second. Not twenty-one! And I've got the key of the door.' He laughed suddenly, easily, joyfully.
âCor, what presumption! So you have. And I forgot to say anything about your birthday supper to the Theobalds. Mention it, will you? I might forget again. Just tell them the second, informal, at the Maison Blanche.'
âBut that's a month away! Ages.'
âI know. But they're pretty busy, so get in quickly, then they can't very well refuse. I'll do it formally, but in case I forget. You know? Do that?'
He stood there by the lichened figure, polishing the key slowly on his sleeve.
âYou hear me?'
He nodded, looked up, smiled, waved the key.
âNow belt off to your school-room. Do a bit of work. I am paying good francs for these lessons.'
âWe're not going to do any lessons. We're all going to Fréjus to the Safari Park. The giraffes and hippos. You're not supposed to know.'
âThen I don't. Tell Arthur I'll be here at five to collect you. All right?
Five.'
I didn't wait for him to reply, pulled out of the shade of the bay trees and slowly began to bounce and crunch over the hard-packed ruts of the track to the lane. Clever old Arthur! Of course he wouldn't try to shove
Contes et légendes
down the throat of a child who had just discovered his future to be in question and his very existence in jeopardy. Giraffes and hippos. Of course!
I watched him through the rear window, saw him turn away and run back to the little house unaware that the key which he held triumphantly above his head had not only opened the door to his probable future (or the start of it at any rate), but that it would also be responsible for the overturning of a number of well-ordered apple-carts presently awaiting my arrival in Nice.
I was absolutely determined to do as much damage in the marketplace as I possibly could during the progress of the day.
She was sitting at a corner banquette, a flute of champagne and a bowl of pistachio nuts on the table before her. She hadn't changed at all, and after only a six- or seven-week separation there was no reason to suppose that she would, except she was now very brown, trimmer somehow, her hair piled high, fixed on top with a wide black velvet bow. Guerlain scent, careful make-up, silk shirt, pearl ear-rings, good shoes. The Drab of Parsons Green, as she had called herself on occasion, had fled. Helen was back to the woman she had been before we married. She was not, I could easily see now and much, much too late, the marrying kind. Somebody's expensive mistress was her line, to hell with domestic bliss.
I ordered a flute, accepted her slightly cool kiss on both cheeks and sat beside her. She lit a cigarette, waved a thin tendril of smoke under my nose. Playfully.
âStarted again. You mind?'
âNot a bit, of course not.'
âIt doesn't drive you mad? You smoked so much. Three packs, was it?'
âAbout. You look really splendid. Work suits you.'
She raised her flute, took a sip, set it back on the table,
grinned at me. âIt suits me fine. It all started to come back to me. At first I was shit scared that I'd lost it all, lost my touch. You know? But not a bit. Everyone was very patient and kind and Eric was amazingly encouraging and I just swam in again. Terrific!'
âGreat. Good. I'm really glad. And have you finished? I mean in Marbella.'
âThe recce, yes. The shoot won't be until October. Cooler and the light is kinder. And you?
You
look terrific, if I may be so bold, I mean you look seriously glam! Brown, lean, boyish â¦' She laughed, smothered it with a ringed hand. âPerhaps we got away from the London grind just in the nick? What do you think? And now you say you'll stay here? Amazing!'
â
I
think so. I agree, I think we
did
get away. In the nick. It was a lucky moment when that key fell on the doormat that morning. Very lucky indeed. For us both.'
She took up her glass, serious eyes, both hands to the flute, red-tipped tendrils curling. âWas it all ghastly? Finding the “ewe lamb” and all that? Awful, I suppose.'
And so I told her. Carefully edited, giving her a fairly distorted view, quite deliberately, of James's life, wife and times. But when I had finished, up to and including the trip to the clinic but excluding the true diagnosis, she looked very correctly grave, flicked her cigarette into the ashtray, then apparently decided to stub it out.
âA funeral? I suppose so. You went, of course, good old loyal you. His wife? Was she destroyed? Suppose so ⦠Of course, I never knew him, but I suppose, being so much younger than you, he was really very young. It seems so much more terrible to die young.'
âIt is. There was a cremation, but she didn't attend. I collected his ashes and got rid of them.'
âRid
of them? You didn't bury them? Graveyard, flowers, all that stuff?
Rid
of them?'
âChucked them into the sea. Scattered them. He's quite gone now.'
For a moment she looked at me in calm surprise, then she shook her head and laughed gently. âHonestly, you Caldi-cotts. You
are
a rum bunch. Chucking your little brother's ashes into the sea. Honestly! You really are weird. I see now where Giles gets his moods from. You know, William, I don't go along with the pneumonia bit. It was something else, wasn't it? Only you don't want to say? Right?'
âViral pneumonia on the death certificate. You can browse through the papers with the Vice-Consul. Here, in Nice.' I took a sip of my wine. âA most caring chap.'
âI feel certain he is.' She fixed an ear-ring. âHow is Giles anyway? I told you Annie is in fine form? My mother is buying her a pony? Madness of course, as I said, but she's given up the ballet idea and now wants us to use her proper name, Annicka. Longs to be a show-jumper; first a groom, get trained properly, then she's all set for Hickstead! God! And my surly son? At a tutor? Very posh, and not before time either.'
She had obviously decided to give up pursuing the cause of James's death, using her common sense instead, so now we were moving towards family matters which she could more easily comprehend. She had never met any of my family. They had all died before we married, except, of course, James. So now that we had got over the obligatory, and polite, preliminaries, we must consider the hurdles of our own life. It was littered with them as far as I could see. A veritable Hickstead indeed. Or, I wondered vaguely, Aintree?
I briefly told her how well Giles had settled down, was doing with French, that he had gone through all his shirts and toothpaste, and then she finished her wine and said briskly not to worry about that, Mummy was back for the time being, and that she'd take care of shirts and things. She
was glad that she had packed him enough to come out with, and when was I planning to return to England now that my âmission' had been accomplished? I surely had no reason to stay on, had I? We simply had to come to terms with putting Simla Road on the market, and getting things into store, or whatever I wanted to do with the stuff. We had to move pretty quickly because the Festival started on the 26th of June, and that was not so far ahead.
âWhat festival?' I finished my wine and set down my glass.
âThe Television Advertising Festival. It's always in June, and VideoEuropa, that's Eric's company, is a strong contender for the Golden Camera this year. It's a huge booster for whoever wins.'
âI am sure it is. But what has that to do with you? I mean directly? And with Simla Road and all the rest of it? Why the rush?'
âWell ⦠Oh, don't be silly, William. I want to
be
there. Be with the company. You don't think I'd pull out on him, do you?'
âYou don't seem to mind pulling out, as you call it, on me? Who's been at the house while you've been away? It hasn't been absolutely empty all this time?'
âTwo weeks! And no it hasn't! Are you mad? I told you time and again. Mrs Nicholls goes in every day and Maureen Cornwall and Chris have the key and keep an eye on the place, and anyway it's like a bloody fortress! Fort Knox!' She felt about for her bag on the banquette, asked me to get the bill, and stood up briskly. She had brought this move to an end.
Walking through the marble pillars and glittering doors, she said, quite suddenly, âWe'll go up to Eric's suite. It's no use trying to discuss things with you in a restaurant. You are sliding into one of your stubborn moods, I can tell.'
She went over to the desk and asked for a key. By
number. I went with her in silence to the lifts, up to the third floor.
Eric Rhys-Evans's suite was very splendid. A sea view naturally, palms, yachts, sea, a mass of flowers, tuberoses, malmaisons, and spiky birds of paradise everywhere. The room was heavy with sickly scent.
Helen moved swiftly to close a door, but not before I saw a pair of her evening shoes spilled by the leg of a gilded chair. âRing for room service and get a menu? I'll fix the drinks.'
There was wine in a bucket. Ice clattering and sliding, she struggled for a moment, and I let her, with the cold bottle, then she thrust it at me to open, while she arranged two glasses.
âOf
course
I didn't leave the house empty. You knew that. You really are bloody sometimes! You knew I was going to Eric, that I was giving everything over to you, house, furniture, stuff. You knew!'
âYes. I know that. We agreed all that a long time ago. Just seems rather a lot to do, packing up, selling houses, sorting ourselves out, all before some bloody Festival in a couple of weeks' time.'
Then room service answered and I asked for the menu.
âCertainly, Monsieur Reeze-Evans, right away,' the voice said.
âIs this your chum's permanent squat? The Negresco?'
âNo, it is not. He has to give a dinner tonight for the American side of VideoEuropa, VideoUS. And wives. It's easier here than at the house. They know him here and take care of everything.'
âObviously.'
âI don't know why it's “obviously”, but I can detect the snarl. Your dry wit.'
âI really didn't mean it to be a snarl. Sorry.' I poured the wine carefully because she had shaken it up in her struggle
to open it and it was mostly foam. âKrug!' I said in a faux-reverent voice which she apparently accepted as quite normal. âMr Rhys-Evans must be
very
rich.'
âHe is. Very. And I enjoy that.' She took her glass and went over to the open windows, leant against them, the light breeze billowing the thin net curtains. âI know you hate him. Hate the idea of him. But he just called one evening when you were away. Just after you left. I'd met him quite by surprise one evening at the Cornwalls'. A drink before dinner. He asked what I was doing, that's all.'
âAnd you told him, of course?' I had settled into the twin of the gilded chair in the bedroom. Everything was Louis Quelquechose and faux-Lalique in the suite, all very sparkling. She turned and came back into the room, arms folded, the flute in her hand, her brow slightly furrowed with, I presumed, anxiety. Or else irritation? Difficult to tell at this moment.
âYes. I told him. I said we were ⦠well, separating ⦠that I would need a job. Something like that. A joke really.'
âWhich? The separating or the job?'
âThe job. The separating has never been a joke. I have meant that ever since that god-awful discussion we had in March; the “clearing of the air”, as you so succinctly put it.'
âAnd he had a job for you up his sleeve? Good timing.'
She sat down opposite me just as room service arrived with two large cards and the wine-list bound in red leather. He bowed and handed her a menu.
âBonjour, Madame Reeze-Evans,' and turning to me with a faint nod handed me one as well. I asked him to give us quarter of an hour and he left huffily in a swift little patter of feet.
âTaken the vows already, I gather?'
âI've never seen that idiot before in my life. He just assumed that you were Mr Evans. William, I am going to be absolutely honest with you. I am determined to make this
second chance of a job â of a life, if you like â work. Eric thinks I can make it, I know I can. I love it all, I can manage it. At the very start I thought I might have been too old, they'd want someone younger. But I fought that, and I've won. And I am going to go on winning. All I need is a bit of extra luck. Just a teensy-weensy bit. You agreed, as you must remember, that we both
wanted
to separate, that it would be by mutual consent, no ugliness, you said, just “pack it in”, I believe was your exact expression, and I agreed. We have had fourteen years together. Some of it was great. Some of it has been absolutely dreadful and I want out before I am too old to start again. Is that so wrong?'
âNo, it's not at all wrong. It's just that things, since we made those arrangements, have altered just a “teensey ween-sey” bit. In â what is it? â six, seven weeks, say two months, we have both managed to do something rather unexpected.'
She got up and refilled her glass, turned towards me holding the Krug bottle by its body. âUnexpected? What do you mean, William? Be simple.'
âWell, simply put, we have both of us met someone else. We didn't expect that to happen then, did we?'
She poured wine into my offered glass, settled it back into the ice-bucket. âSomeone else? You mean,
you
have? Here?'
âYes. I have. Here. That was not on the agenda, was it?'
âI don't think I really understand you.'