Authors: Frank Moorhouse
Actually, she'd learned Scotch from her father and John Latham.
Oh dear. What would these two Proper Men think of her now, here in her living room with a nancyboy? She rushed the images of their quizzical faces from her consciousness.
He came back and handed her the Scotch.
âYou know â¦' she said, âI've spent more of my life in your company than in that of any other person.'
âYou were always good at a certain “statistical reality”, Edith.'
âAs you, dear, were always rather good at a certain “fantastical reality”.'
Before Ambrose could be seated, she drank down the Scotch and sighed, waiting for it to seep through her body and mind. She held out the empty glass to Ambrose who went back to the butler's table and poured her another.
She wanted the drink to heighten and celebrate the moment, to hold it securely in place.
âIs Robert coming back, do you think?' he asked.
Were they now fashioning an âarrangement'?
She sang. âHusband Robert to the war has gone, his faithful harp beside him.'
âAnd his Harpy left behind him?'
âI have
never, ever
been a
harpy
. And to quote an Australian poem, “Robert's gone a drovin', and we don't know where he are.” Oddly, knowing I'm still here allows him to be solo. Something like that. To be partly a bachelor-journalist again. With his newspaper men mates in dusty, distant places and in exotic belly-dancing clubs.'
âWhat does it allow to you?' Ambrose asked.
Ah.
âI suppose,' she said, âthat Robert will go from one war to another, if there is another war, or one horror spot to anotherâplagues, earthquakes and
coups d'etat
are what he lives on. He'll visit home now and then. For clean underwear. Something like that. Once a year? Twice a year?'
Visit home?
Ambrose said, âWhat a curious man he turned out to be. Not the marrying kind, perhaps?'
âPerhaps. Perhaps neither he nor I was.'
âTo repeat: what then does it mean to you, Edith?'
Yes, that was a question.
Sipping her drink, she thought.
He waited.
She replied, âLatitude.'
She saw that he liked the precision of her answer. She liked it as well.
âWhich is not independence?' he said.
She again thought.
She replied, âNo.'
She thought some more and said, âLatitude is not an open door to chance.'
Her answer pleased her immensely. But to her profound irritation, her clever reply curled itself, in her mind, into a question, âLatitude: not an open door to chance?'
Her wretched mind had added a question mark.
âLatitude may be an open door to
permutation
,' Ambrose said. âI look around the apartment and I see much of you. I see a little of Robert.'
âRobert never did really touch the walls. He doesn't alter the space he's in. He left all that to me, the interior arrangements, the pictures, the ornaments. And what there was of him has been removed. His army photographâhis company of the Lancastershire Fusiliers. I didn't mean for it to sound like that. No sneer meant to the Lancastershire
Fusiliers. Sorry, Lancastershire Fusiliers. He still seemed to leave ⦠deposits. As cats and foxes do. Squirtings in the corners.'
âIt was his lair, too.'
âIt was his lair, too. Robert is in that room.' She pointed at the door to his room with her drink. âIn what we called back home “the spare room”.'
âSpare room?'
âTo be precise, it is now the room where either the past is stored, or the present is in abeyance. Or possibly, where the past is awaiting collection andâremoval.'
She saw that she was tampering ever so slightly with her answers to make them accommodating to Ambrose while trying to present no false promises.
âI see you still have that wretched Kelen cartoon on the wall.'
She looked at the framed cartoon having not âseen' it for some time.
It was done by the cartoonist Kelen, and given to her and to Robert on the day they had first seriously flirted in public and had later become intimate.
It showed them both standing before a double bed saying, âNo, after you'. It was a take-off of another well-known cartoon.
She got up and went over and removed it. She opened the door of Robert's room, and placed the framed cartoon inside, and closed the door.
Ambrose made no remark.
She came back and sat with him again, and said, âDo you know what I think, my dear Ambrose?'
âWhat do you think?'
âI think, that you should have the second bedroom. It needs some furniture. But has a westerly aspect. I seem to recall you prefer not to rise with the sun.'
âHave always been somewhat out of step with the sun.'
He pointed at the door of the second bedroom questioningly. âThat's the room?'
âYes.'
He stood and lightly walked across to the door of the second bedroom, opened it and looked in. âIn the old days, you came to my apartment. Now I come to yours,' he called to her.
âIt appears that way.'
He went into the room and then came out. He draped himself against the wall, gracefully, one bare foot on the wall, drink in hand, leaning back, his privates showing alluringly through the silk. She felt her body enliven at the sight. âThe room's fine. But what pray tell is that strange
chaise longue
.'
âThe Woodrow Wilson chair? It can be changed to fourteen different positions. Mechanically.'
âOh. It might have to go,' he said. He looked at her. âAm I then to have the status of parlour-boarder?'
âMore than that, perhaps. More likeâtwo gals sharing an apartment.'
âDo these two gals share a bed on cold and comfortless nights?'
âThese two gals share a bed whenever they wish.'
âAnd when the Husband returns from the Wars?'
She found something of an answer. âMaybe there's room for three. One as the guest.'
âWhich the guest?'
She had no firm answer.
Did she, then, now have a
mariage blanc
?
Or was it, perhaps, a
ménage à trois
?
Heavens.
Ambrose did not push for further answers on that front.
Did she really believe that was how it all would work?
âAnd public opinion?' he asked.
She made a dismissive noise. âThe old gang know us as a couple from the old days. God knows what they know or
what they care to know. Anyhow, the League is so big now. Gossip doesn't matter as much. Too much of it now. And the people at the League are not a club anymore. If asked, we shall say that you are a house guest, living here until you find yourself an apartment. And time will pass.'
He looked at her quizzically. âAre you happy with that formulation, Edith? Is that to be my
locus standi
?'
She frowned.
She thought about it. âOn second thoughts, no. I'm not happy with that formulation.'
âFor a moment, Edith, I thought that you may have become duplicitous.'
âMy trick has always been not to be duplicitous when others think I
am
being duplicitous.'
âIf you permit someone to believe you
are
being duplicitous you are being duplicitous.'
âI will tell the truth to whoever asks, or â¦' she smiled, â⦠or whatever part of the truth to which I think they are entitledâor able to comprehend without blowing a fuse.'
Ambrose returned to her and they again entwined into each other's arms, smiling, she aware of a stiffening in his groin.
He said, â “By how we live, we show the way”?'
She sensed that he was quoting her, quoting a distant, more youthful Edith. It came to her mind. âThe quote from Stendhal of which I was once rather fond. I think Julien says something like, “I am convincing the world to make heaven on earth.” And he asks himself, “How then shall I make that place visible to them?” And he replies to himself, “By the difference between my conduct and that of a layman.” Something like that.'
âIt might be a rather tiring way to live.'
âWe might alter the requirements a little.
By how we live, we show some of the wayâto some of the worldâsometimes
. Not to all, all at once,' she said.
âWe are not to live as another of your instructional picnics, I hope?'
âNo more pedagogic picnics.'
Edith heard then in her voice a new resignation. But not a giving up. More a giving
over
to the imperfection of it all.
Imperfection seemed to be all that she had.
She decided now was the right time to ask him another question.
âYou seem to like womenâto like meâintimately, that is?'
âI do. When they are women such as youâwhich is rare.'
âAnd where do men fit into the picture?'
âLet me tell you something I have discovered'
âI am all ears.'
âI have dallied with men.'
âI know.'
âAnd I have loved you, and one other woman.'
âI know about
her
.'
âAnd more often, I've had dalliances now and then with men who dress as women.'
âI know that too. And?'
âAll those dalliances and that lovingâmen and women and the otherâwere fairly glorious. And you were the most glorious of all.'
âYou are required by etiquette to say that,' she laughed, covering her joy at his words.
âI suspect that the world of which I speak does not have an etiquette, as such. I meant what I said with all my heartâyou are the most glorious of all.'
She was moved.
âThank you,' she said quietly.
She considered the breathtaking gift of his revelations.
In a soft voice she asked, âAnd what were you to those you dallied with? How did they see you? As man? As woman? As woman-man?'
âThey knew me, I suspect,
as a man who dressed as a woman
. Perhaps, best described as a man who was
womanly
.'
âI see.' She was unsure of the degree of her comprehension.
âPerhaps I am your foible?' he said.
âPerhaps we are a couple who dares not speak its name? Or who
has no name
.'
âNicely put.'
She decided to leave it at that.
But it raised one other last question.
âWhat if you should choose to bring home a guestâan overnight guest?'
He contemplated the question. âI would not consider it good form to do that.'
âWhat would you do then if overtaken by desire?'
âBehave as a cat, perhaps. Find some dark alley. Some alternative accommodation.'
She left it at that. âAnd are you sane?'
âDr Vittoz thinks I am sane enough. My English doctor thinks so as well. Do you think I am?'
âYes. Sane enoughâand sane in the right way.'
They kissed again.
âI, too, have changed, perhaps,' she said.
âHow so?'
âYou may find that I have changed in such a way that you find nothing about which you need to fib.'
âHow nice.'
âYou can be my Rotten Friend, though, if you find you have to be. As well as my Strange Lover.'
âI have very little Rotten left in me, I hope. But, as you see, the Strangeness is still there.'
She stood to remove her outer clothing, wanting their bodies to be joined.
She wanted to feel his body through the nightdress, for them to be bodies in silk against each other.
And the nightdressâher Gift of Affirmationâwould change, once again, this time into a Gift of Carnal Celebration.
She remembered one of their silly old games.
As she undressed herself before him, she whispered, âHalt. Who goes there? Man or Woman?'
She removed her underpants and corset and left on only her petticoat, brassiere, garter belt, and stockings.
He whispered his reply. âNeither man nor woman.'
She sat down again, going into his arms. âWho then?'
âA brazen hussy.'
âApproach that we may recognise you.'
She opened her legs to him.
He moved onto her and kissed her. Her hand went lightly to him, under the nightdress and she led him to her, allowing him to enter her deeply.
Lying back under him, she whispered, âPass friendâall's well.'
âGuess what job I've landed?' she said to Ambrose as she arrived to join him at the Perle du Lac, trying not to be breathless, putting down her satchel and the bundle of papers she was carrying under her arm.
âGather your breath.'
âEden and the Committee of Five. Liaison Officer.
Working with Eden
.'
âI wondered why we were eating flashily tonight. You know Eden is called “The Glamour Boy”?'
âAnd he
is
. At last we'll bang on economic sanctions. For the first time in the history of the world we are going to stop war by non-military means. Eden is being formidable. Italy is going to get a caning.'
Ambrose put away the newspaper he'd been reading and said, â
If
Italy is found in breach of the Covenant. And
if
everyone comes on board.'
âAmbrose, this is itâthe defining moment. Yes, I know I've said this before and been wrong. This time the League strikes. Thump. Whack.' She slapped the table. âDisarmament may have failed but this will not.'
âLiaison is rather a delightful fish,' he said. âIt's a role which can be, how shall we say â¦'
âAugmented.'
âPrecisely. We shall say
augmented
. Oh, yes. We can have fun with thisâhowever, it sounds to me that it's not arbitration which has you so breathless but more the possibility of exercising naked power.'
âAs something of an expert at naked power and also something of an expert at
la liaison
, you must coach me.'
âMany times have I been
l'officier de liaison
. And in the strangest of situations.'
âIt'll be power, darling, if we get to hit Italy with economic sanctions.'
âYou know who dreamed up this economic sanctions thing?'
âCecil? Wilson?'
âNo.'
âWho?'
âI should warn youâyou won't like the answer.'
âWho?'
âPope Benedict XV.'
âHow infuriating. I suppose even popes can come up with a brilliant idea every century or so.'
âI dare say.'
âDarling, I'm on my way up.' She stretched out her arms and danced in her chair.
âDecorum, Edith. You may well be. Did Avenol appoint you?'
âHe said, “I want you to report to me. If I put a French person in there, Eden will not talk freely. They will talk freely with you, the English. But, remember, you report to me.” '
âTo him? Not to the League?'
âI said, “Oh, absolutely, my loyalty is always to the League.” '
âAnd he said?'
â “I am the League.” '
âHe didn't!?'
âHe did. “
La Société, c'est moi
!”.'
âHe was joking!?'
âHe was joking, and at the same time, he was not joking.'
âWhat is the politics of this appointment? What is your analysis?'
âFor a start, Jeanne whispered my name in his ear. Vouched for my absolute neutrality. And for my deep attachment to Franceâboth at the same time.'
âThe French affiliation. I keep forgetting about Jeanne's Important Uncle at the Quai d'Orsay.'
âImportant Grandfather. Jeanne's loyal to the League. And more crucially, she's loyal to me.'
âI suppose these days one is loyal to The Good People. But how to know them?'
â
We
are The Good People.'
âThat illusion is the first step on the road to conspiracy.'
âWell, after all, darling, conspiracy is your
field
.'
He ignored this reference to his irregular past. âWhoâapart from Edenâis on the Committee of Five?'
âEngland, France, SpainâSenor de Madariaga, one of the good peopleâPoland, Turkey. Madariaga is in the chair. But Eden's the prime mover. Alexis Léger will surely be there. Swoon.'
âNow that you're really in the diplomatic thick of things, I have one last lesson in diplomacy for you, Edith.'
âYet another “last lesson”. How many last lessons are there?'
âOf last lessons there is no end.'
âWhat is it then?' she said, chin on hand, pretending to studious attention.
âThe Lesson of the Stiff Face.'
âThe Lesson of the Stiff Face?'
âIn all you've learnedâand may I say, I feel at times you now are ahead of me in your understanding of statecraftâ
the lesson you haven't yet learned is the lesson of the stiff face.'
âPray tell.'
âYou have a face which is too expressive, Edithâwhich is, in every human situation except that of statecraft, a wonderful, winning, and enchanting thing to have. You have
un visage express if
. That's no good for diplomacy. No good at all. For example, there's tremendous power in the act of not smiling. You smile naturally and frequently. In statecraft, that is not always efficacious. Not smiling is a way of causing others some degree of quandary. They must ask themselves: “What is it that we have hereâthis unsmiling enigma?” You have heard it said many times that a diplomat is a mask for his country. A diplomat cannot smile or be pleased without the authority of his government. You must now learn to wear The Mask of the Stiff Face.'
Edith made a stiff face.
âPerfect.'
âAnd as a diplomat in high places you do not stretch out your arms and wriggle at the dinner table.'
She stretched out her arms and danced again. It was a long time since she'd felt in such high spirits. âNow for a stiff drink. I can do a Stiff Drink.'
Edith hit trouble on her first day. The Italian diplomat, Baron Aloisi, presented to the Committee two volumes of reports and photographs of brutalities he alleged that the Ethiopians had inflicted on captured Italians. It was to counter Ethiopian allegations of Italian use of poison gas.
The volumes with the photographs were passed around but not to her.
When the men had finished, she reached over for them, but Aloisi without looking at her, simply moved them out of her reach. He said, âNot, I think, for the eyes of a lady.'
The two volumes, however, remained halfway in the common part of the conference table but half in what could be seen as Aloisi's official space at the table.
She looked to Madariaga but he did not give her his attention.
Edith swallowed and said in a voice remarkably firm and quiet, and with a face diplomatically stiff, âI feel I should be as fully informed as the rest of the Committee,' including herself by declaration to be
in
the Committee. She did not want to be classified as an observer.
She held out her hand.
And anyhow, they were tabled documents. She added, âI would feel remiss if I were not to see your documents. At this Committee, I should, perhaps, be considered as the eyes and ears of the Secretary-General.'
And, there, she'd spoken, even if only as a functionary. How important it was to make oneself speak on such occasions, to breach the cage of one's personal silence and to dive into the committee's deliberations.
Aloisi said, â
Mais oui
, of course,' but in fact ignored her, and went on with his claims that the Ethiopians had used dum-dum bullets, hollowed to explode in the body.
She heard him refer, in French, to the brutalisation of the captured Italians and the âloss of their manhood', the meaning of which she guessed.
Léger, the head of the French Department of Foreign Affairs, said something about âa warrior tradition from times immemorial'.
Aloisi said, âNot the traditions of a civilised nation.'
Léger said, âQuite so. Civilised nations have discovered worse things to do to each other. We are more modernistic barbarians.'
About the documents, she felt she was about to suffer a defeat but could see no way of advancing her position. She was tempted to get up from the table, walk around to where
the volumes were, and take them. But that would be a tad temperamental.
Eden came to her rescue. He reached over and took the books from their ambiguous location on the table and moved them in front of himself, into his personal space, and then opened one of them randomly, turning the pages, while Aloisi talked on. At some point, Eden then closed the book and pushed both volumes out into the common area of the table, but this time in her direction and within her reach.
He said,
sotto voce
, âGhastly stuff,' perhaps as a warning to her. Or perhaps as an invitation to her to look.
She realised she had his implicit support.
She reached over and took them securely into her space, but did not open them. She would spare the men their embarrassment and peruse them in private.
Aloisi glanced at this manoeuvre without pausing in his speech. âEthiopia is controlled by a ruling minority which has cruelly repressed its people. Ethiopia is not an organised state at all. It should never have been admitted as a member of the League.'
âItaly voted for her admission,' Léger said without looking up, addressing his remark to no one in particular.
When the committee adjourned for lunch, she was pleased that Eden invited her to join them, but she declined, feeling she should begin writing her report, sensing that the men needed to be free of a woman's presence. She knew things of importance would be said at lunch, but that couldn't be helped.
She had Eden on her side and she did not wish to strain it.
As Eden and the others put on their coats, she recited to them,
When the great ones go off to their dinner,
The secretary stays getting thinner and thinner,
Racking his brains to record and report,
What he thinks that they think they ought to have thought.
They chuckled. Even Aloisi.
âQuite trueâand quite unfair,' Eden said.
As they trundled off to lunch, she immediately regretted having done the recitation. She'd put herself back in the subordinate role. But at least the doggerel referred to a secretary of the higher order.
She asked Gerty, who was acting as the stenographer, to bring her in some lunch on a tray from the café. âAnd a
pichet
of their
vin blanc
.'
âYes, madam.' Gerty looked to see that the men were out of earshot and said in her staccato, Dutch-accented English, âMadam Berryâare you going to look in the book?'
She raised her eyes to Gerty, one wicked woman to another. âWhen I've got my report on its way.'
âCould I have a look?'
âIt's really a Committee documentâbut I think that we can find a time for you to have a peek, Gerty.'
âThank you, madam.'
Edith had some qualms about the voyeuristic use of the material. And then had a qualm about her prudish protectiveness of Gerty. Gerty was no prude.
As soon as Gerty had left to get their lunch, she opened the Italian atrocity documents.
They were photographs of castration, of exposed wounds from where limbs had been hacked off, of stomachs exploded by bullets, of intestines spilling onto the sand. There was a photograph of an Italian soldier with a spike driven through his body from anus to mouth.
She came across a photograph which she at first did not understand, and then felt stunned. The Italian soldier had a penis in his mouth. His own penis had been cut off and put in his mouth.
To her surprise, she found that she viewed the ghastly photographs with a coolness, a detachment. Maybe those years of dissection in the science laboratories as a student were now serving a diplomatic purpose.
She wondered if they were âdoctored' photographs but concluded that it would be difficult to do that.
Before she'd finished looking at them, her detachment began to dissolve and she felt dry-mouthed and dizzy. She took a glass of water.
She put the documents back in their ambiguous space near Aloisi's chair, out of some deference to him. She did not wish to offend the Italian government nor the sensitivities of Italian manliness.
It was, she recorded to herself, the first time she'd seen a castrated man.
She continued to feel queasy about it but began writing her report. She had second thoughts about whether Gerty should see them.
But Gerty was hard to stop.